Navy Sports

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Sunday, May 27, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Badgers Edge Mids for Buck Walsh Trophy</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- A late Navy rally was not enough for the Mids to overcome a one-half of a boat length deficit to Wisconsin in the varsity race between the two heavyweight crew programs Sunday morning on the Severn River in Annapolis. The Badgers posted a nine-tenths of a second victory over the Mids in the annual race for the Buck Walsh Trophy.</p>

<p>After an even start to the race by the two boats, the Badgers held a slim one-seat advantage by the 500-meter mark of the course before extending the margin to one-half of a boat length by 1000 meters. The Mids slowly closed on the Wisconsin crew and narrowed the gap down to a little more than one seat with 300 meters remaining until the finish line. The Badgers proceeded to put together a strong final 10 strokes to the race to hold off the Mids and emerge with the narrow victory.</p>

<p>Wisconsin recorded a winning time of 5:40.52 to edge Navy's clocking of 5:41.40 and claim the Buck Walsh Trophy for the second-straight year.</p>

<p>In their most recent contests prior to Sunday, Wisconsin placed third in the grand final of the Eastern Sprints two weeks ago, while Navy placed fifth in the petite final of the championship.</p>

<p>"We feel very good about the improvement in our crew from the Eastern Sprints," said Navy head coach Rick Clothier. "It has been exciting to work with these guys over the last few weeks as they have worked hard to make themselves better. Today showed the progress we have made and we are looking ride the enthusiasm from this result into next week's Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship."</p>

<p>In other races between the two programs Sunday, the Badgers recorded victories in the second varsity (eight seconds) and freshman eight contests (nine seconds), as well as in three of the five smaller boat races.</p>

<p>Both squads will close their respective seasons this coming week at the IRA National Championship, which runs Thursday through Saturday in Camden, N.J.</p>

<p>First Varsity Eight (Buck Walsh Race)
Wisconsin, 5:40.52; Navy, 5:41.40</p>

<p>Second Varsity Eight
Wisconsin, 5:48.93; Navy, 5:56.90</p>

<p>Freshman Eight
Wisconsin, 5:54.67; Navy, 6:03.45</p>

<p>Varsity Four/wo
Navy (lightweights), 6:20.59; Wisconsin, 6:29.55</p>

<p>Varsity Four/with
Wisconsin, 6:32.09; Navy, 6:44.30</p>

<p>Freshman Four/with
Navy, 6:36.63; Wisconsin, 6:42.71</p>

<p>Open Four/with
Wisconsin A, 6:37.84; Wisconsin B, 6:40.75; Navy, 6:48.60</p>

<p>Varsity 2/wo
Wisconsin, 6:51.56; Navy (lightweights), 7:13.07</p>

<p>May 28, 2007</p>

<p>By Justin Kischefsky
Assistant Sports Information Director
U.S. Naval Academy</p>

<p>The U.S. Naval Academy is one of the many colleges able to tout itself as a national university due to having a student population representing all 50 states. In contrast to many of those other schools that may have a high concentration of collegiate scholars from its home city, state or region, students attending Navy converge in Annapolis from nearly all of the 435 U.S. Congressional districts, giving every corner of our country a hand in forming the 4,000-member Brigade of Midshipmen.</p>

<p>Navy's athletic teams also follow along with the national makeup of the overall Brigade. As an example, the 77 student-athletes who comprised the men's and women's swimming and diving teams during the 2006-07 academic year hailed from 23 different states.</p>

<p>After their four years together on The Yard, the graduates and newly commissioned ensigns and second lieutenants are immediately scattered again as they are deployed to ships, aviation units and bases around the world for the start of their careers in the Navy or Marine Corps.</p>

<p>While opportunities to see former classmates on a regular basis are nearly impossible during their years of naval service, mini-reunions between small groups are not uncommon. One such gathering is taking place this Memorial Day Weekend as nine former members of the Navy swimming and diving programs are currently based together at the Navy's Explosive Ordnance Disposal School at Eglin Air Force base outside of Destin, Fla.</p>

<p>The responsibilities of an EOD officer may be little known outside of the military, but it does not make their duties any less vital. The mission statement for this branch of the Navy which can trace its roots to before the start of World War II reads as follows:</p>

<p>"Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technicians render safe all types of ordnance, both conventional and unconventional, improvised, chemical, biological, and nuclear to include Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD). They perform land and underwater location, identification, render-safe, and recovery (or disposal) of foreign and domestic ordnance. They conduct demolition of hazardous munitions, pyrotechnics, and retrograde explosives using detonation and burning techniques. They forward deploy and fully integrate with the various Combatant Commanders, Special Operations Force (SOF), and various warfare units within the Navy, Marine Corps, and Army. They are also called upon to support military and civilian law enforcement agencies.</p>

<p>"EOD Technicians' missions take them to all environments, every climate, in every part of the world. They have many assets available to arrive to their mission, from open and closed-circuit scuba and surface-supplied diving rigs, to parachute insertion from fixed-wing and fast-rope, rappel, and Special Purpose Insertion Extraction (SPIE) from rotary aircraft, to small boats and tracked vehicles." (<a href="http://www.eod.navy.mil%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.eod.navy.mil&lt;/a&gt;)&lt;/p>

<p>Because of the immense challenges faced daily by an EOD officer, the process to become one is grueling and highly selective. It is a job someone very much has to "want" to do. </p>

<p>For nearly all the nine former midshipmen, the seeds of interest in this field were initially sewn by conversations with EOD officers during their time at the Academy.</p>

<p>"After talking to several EOD techs, not one disliked their job and everyone was intelligent, motivated and hard working. Those are the people I want to work with," said Ryan McAnally (Class of 2005).</p>

<p>"Originally the opportunity to challenge myself mentally and physically peaked my interest, so I decided to do an EOD 'cruise' before my senior year at Navy and I loved it. I love the enlisted sailors who serve in the community and I love the level of responsibility given to such junior naval officers," said Jake Keefe (Class of 2005).</p>

<p>"I wanted to become an EOD officer because it's an amazing community. It is a very close-knit family of people who all love to be challenged and pushed to their limits. After learning about the community through my years at school, I knew it would be a perfect match for me," said Ian Getzler (Class of 2006).</p>

<p>Starting with Navy's Class of 2006, those who service selected EOD were sent to their first phase of training straight out of the Academy. For those who graduated prior to last year, however, the start of their official EOD training began after the conclusion of a tour aboard a ship as a surface warfare officer.</p>

<p>Keefe and Jacob Loeffler (Class of 2004) were both deployed to ships in the Persian Gulf, Jason Burkett (Class of 2004) was deployed to Japan and Allison Moon (Class of 2004) served aboard ships based both near (Pearl Harbor) and far (Southeast Asia). </p>

<p>One of Moon's more memorable experiences involved the travel she endured when she left her ship to report to Newport, R.I., to begin damage control assistant (firefighting) school.</p>

<p>"I flew on consecutive planes from Independent Samoa to America Samoa to Tokyo to Detroit to Providence, then I took a bus to Newport. I was lying in the Detroit airport completely confused as to what day or time it was."</p>

<p>Tyler Smith (Class of 2004) counts among his experiences the opportunity to participate in the recovery of an old aircraft off the coast of Cochin, India, as well as the successful recovery of an F-16 in South Korea. Additionally, he took part in a site survey in the Marshall Islands on the only surviving TBD-1 Devastators (Torpedo Planes from the Battle of Midway).</p>

<p>Regardless of the path taken by the former mids to Destin, all had to first complete dive school before they could advance to Eglin AFB. Though challenging, dive school was very much looked forward to and enjoyed by each of them. It not only returned the lifelong swimmers to the water, but also allowed them to receive the first taste of what becoming an EOD officer was like.</p>

<p>"Dive school was very memorable to me," said Loeffler. "I made a lot of awesome, lifelong friends."</p>

<p>"The six months of dive school allowed me to bond with other potential EOD officers," said Burkett.</p>

<p>"As part of our dive school in Hawaii we dove underneath the USS Missouri, the ship based on Pearl Harbor where World War II ended," said Moon. "To be able to accomplish something like that was amazing."</p>

<p>For each of them, the current challenges of EOD School has been helped by being surrounded by a contingent of former teammates who have the shared experiences of the Naval Academy.</p>

<p>"Being around so many mids is really great," said Burkett. "It helps strengthen a very strong bond even more."</p>

<p>"It was very sad for me to leave the Navy men's swimming team, and it honestly was hard to get used to the idea we were not together anymore after all we had been through and accomplished," said Brad Snyder (Class of 2006). "However, with going to school here with so many of my former teammates, it's like we never left each other."</p>

<p>"It is definitely exciting to know that a lot of the swimmers are here at EOD School," said Smith. "After swimming with them over my four years, I know they are all really great guys and girls, so I'm looking forward to working with them all."</p>

<p>Once their nine-month stay in the Florida Panhandle is complete, the former Mids will again be separated. This time, their destinations will be to EOD units based around the world. These units are forward deployed, meaning they will be sent into harms way. This knowledge brings the importance of their current training into even clearer focus. </p>

<p>"When I see the news that a car bomb or IED has killed soldiers in Iraq it reminds me I will have a very important job to do once I finish my training and that I will be extremely busy," said Burkett. "It motivates me to learn the very best I can here because I know my future detachment will throw me into some very nasty, complicated situations and I will have to use everything in my 'tool bag' from lessons learned at the Academy, in the fleet and at EOD School to make the correct decisions that will hopefully resolve the situation without the loss of life."</p>

<p>"There probably isn't a day which goes by down here when someone doesn't mention Iraq," said Keefe. "It is not a secret a lot of us will be spending time there and we know it. All we can do is prepare the best we can here and learn from the best teachers in the world. There is a reason why every other country sends students to the Navy EOD School; it's the best there is and all we can do is be a sponge and soak it up."</p>

<p>"The news makes me proud of the people already out there," said Moon. "It is a sobering thought that in a couple of months we will be there too, but that reinforces the desire to receive as much training as you can so you are prepared."</p>

<p>"I originally wanted to become an EOD officer because it presents a wide range of challenges in a close-knit environment," said Smith. "However, as time passes, the mission EOD serves has become more personal. IED attacks in Iraq and Afghanistan are hitting a lot closer to home now that I have more and more friends in those areas. I want to do my part to help protect all those out there serving our country, and EOD provides me that ability to make a difference."</p>

<p>No matter where they will be deployed to following the completion of their training in Florida, all of them will carry along the memories and lessons learned as members of the USNA swimming teams.</p>

<p>"I think an EOD officer is a natural transition from being a swimmer at Navy," said Keefe. "A Navy swimmer takes their body to the limit on a daily basis and then has to go to Bancroft Hall and challenge themselves to be the best students they can be. The same is true for EOD technicians in the fleet as they are expected to perform physically and be sharp when it comes to thinking for one's self."</p>

<p>"The work ethic we held to while on the team at Navy has certainly carried over," said Snyder. "It's a long day getting up for morning practice, going to class all day while lifting weights at lunch, and then going back to practice, but it makes the long days seem not so bad."</p>

<p>"There's a lot of perseverance, hard work and toughness in swimming and it carries forward into the fleet," said McAnally. "The qualities needed to be a swimmer at Navy are what you need to do well in the fleet."</p>

<p>"Teamwork and dedication are at the top of the list for what I learned as a Navy swimmer," said Getzler. "At EOD School, both are critical to success. You aren't just studying for yourself. You have to work together as a class to push through the problems so that everyone can graduate. Without that teamwork and dedication to a goal, no one would make it."</p>

<p>"Balancing the swim team with the rest of the duties required at the Academy was extremely challenging," said Smith. "Doing that for four years required a lot of dedication and focus, and the discipline developed became very useful while serving onboard a ship. Shipboard life can be very hectic and fast paced. You do not always get much sleep and the work never ends. It takes a lot of discipline to manage your division's time and duties so we can all go home and spend what little time we have with friends and family."</p>

<p>For Moon, she can trace the importance of the teamwork needed to be a successful EOD officer to one event during her freshman year at Navy; her first Army-Navy meet in November of 2000.</p>

<p>The Mids entered the West Point pool that day riding an 11-year winning streak over the Black Knights. Navy had posted a slim 152-148 victory over Army one year early in Annapolis, but now found itself trailing by 27 points with just five events remaining.</p>

<p>"Even though I was a plebe, I knew how important this meet was and what was at stake," said Moon. "We were down by a lot, but then I looked around at my teammates and saw everyone start to come together. Everyone said, 'We're Navy. We have to do this. We will get this done.'"</p>

<p>The meet was not decided until the final relay, but in the end Navy had rallied to post a dramatic 151-149 victory and record its 12th-straight win in the series (a winning streak now up to 18 in a row for the Navy women, while the Navy men have posted 16-straight wins in the series).</p>

<p>Moon would go on to earn All-Patriot League honors three times during her career, tie the Navy record for the most career Patriot League Championship relay event titles won with nine, help Navy win a team league championship and be tabbed as the 2004 Patriot League Scholar-Athlete of the Year for her sport. However, none of those accomplishments are more memorable or important to her than what she and her teammates achieved on that winter's night in 2000.</p>

<p>"That night was a defining moment for me. It was when I saw what a team is all about."</p>

<p>Navy assistant coach to compete world team trials</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Monday, May 28, 2007
Wrestling Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773</p>

<p>Navy Wrestling Assistant Coach Scott Owen to Compete at World Team Trials</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Second-year Navy wrestling assistant coach Scott Owen will look to secure a spot on the U.S. National Freestyle Team when he competes at the United States Marine Corps U.S. World Team Trials slated for June 9-10 at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nev. Vying for the opportunity to represent the United States at the World Championships in Baku, Azerbaijan this September, Owen is one of 10 qualifiers at 74 KG/163 lbs. weight class that features the premier Olympic-level wrestlers in the country.</p>

<p>Owen, who wrestles for the New York Athletic Club, qualified for the World Team Trials via his fifth-place finish at the U.S. Open in April and will likely head into the trials as the fifth-seeded wrestler. En route to placing fifth, Owen claimed wins over Iowa State's Trent Paulson, the 2007 NCAA champion at 157 pounds, as well as Missouri's Ben Askren who was the 2007 NCAA champion at 174 pounds.</p>

<p>"This is the tournament you train for," said Owen. "It's the chance to represent your country at the world's. Every match will be tough and you have to be prepared to go through a grinder in order to make the team. I feel prepared and am excited to compete." </p>

<p>United States Marine Corps U.S. World Team Trials facts and figures:</p>

<pre><code>* There are two days of competition, Saturday, June 9 and Sunday, June 10. All four styles of wrestling will be contested each day (men's freestyle, men's Greco-Roman, women's freestyle, Grappling)
* Each weight class will be started and completed in one day. Therefore, there will be championship finals matches on both days of competition.
* On Saturday, June 9, champions will be determined in 16 weight classes. They are Men's freestyle (60 kg, 74 kg, 96 kg), Men's Greco-Roman (55 kg, 74 kg, 84 kg, 120 kg), Women's Freestyle (51 kg, 59 kg, 67 kg, 72 kg), Men's Grappling (70 kg, 80 kg, 92 kg), Women's Grappling (48 kg, 55 kg)
* On Sunday, June 10, champions will be determined in 14 weight classes. They are Men's freestyle (55 kg, 66 kg, 84 kg, 120 kg), Men's Greco-Roman (60 kg, 66 kg, 96 kg), Women's Freestyle (48 kg, 55 kg, 63 kg), Men's Grappling (62 kg, 125 kg), Women's Grappling (63 kg, 72 kg)
* In the three Olympic styles of wrestling, this event will determine the 2007 U.S. World Team that will compete at the 2007 World Wrestling Championships in Baku, Azerbaijan, Sept. 17-23.
* In Grappling, this event will determine the 2007 U.S. World Team that will compete at the 2007 World Wrestling Games in Antalya, Turkey, Sept. 7-9
* The tournament for the Olympic styles of wrestling consists of a Challenge Tournament early in the day in each weight class, with a best-of-three Championship Finals Series at the conclusion of the day.
* Fifteen of the 21 U.S. Nationals champions in the Olympic styles, based upon their past achievements, have earned the right to skip the Challenge Tournament and advance directly into the Championship Final Series.
* All participants in the World Team Trials had to qualify in order to compete. In the Olympic styles, the field in each weight consists of the top seven placewinners from the 2007 U.S. Nationals, past World or Olympic Team members, medalists from international tournaments within the year and specific medalists from selected qualifying events.
* A total of 232 athletes qualified to compete in the three Olympic styles. That breaks down to 85 men freestyle qualifiers, 77 men's Greco-Roman qualifiers and 70 women's freestyle qualifiers. (Usually, not all of the qualifiers choose to enter).
* There are seven World or Champions expected in the field. They include:

  • 1998 World champion Sammie Henson (freestyle)
  • 1996 Olympic champion Kendall Cross (freestyle)
  • 2006 World champion Bill Zadick (freestyle)
  • 2006 World champion Joe Warren (Greco-Roman)
  • 2002 World champion Dremiel Byers (Greco-Roman)
  • 2000 and 2003 World champion Kristie Marano (women's freestyle)
  • 2005 World champion Iris Smith (women's freestyle)
  • There are 21 World or Olympic medalists expected to compete. Along with the gold medalists listed above, they include:

    • 2006 World silver medalist Mike Zadick (freestyle)
    • Two-time World medalist Cary Kolat (freestyle)
    • 2006 World bronze medalist Donny Pritzlaff (freestyle)
    • Two-time World medalist Joe Williams (freestyle)
    • 2005 World bronze medalist Tolly Thompson (freestyle)
    • 2006 World bronze medalist Lindsey Durlacher (Greco-Roman)
    • 2006 World bronze medalist Harry Lester (Greco-Roman)
    • 2005 World bronze medalist Justin Ruiz (Greco-Roman)
    • 2001 World silver medalist Stephanie Murata (women's freestyle)
    • Four-time World and Olympic medalist Patricia Miranda (women's freestyle)
    • 2003 World bronze medalist Jenny Wong (women's freestyle)
    • Two-time World medalist Tina George (women's freestyle)
    • Three-time World and Olympic medalist Sara McMann (women's freestyle)
    • 2005 World bronze medalist Katie Downing (women's freestyle)

  • There are 29 past or current NCAA Div. I champions who qualified to compete.
    </code></pre>

<p>Overall Navy Sports Record, 297-156-3 (.655)</p>

<p>Heavyweight Crew (4-4)
Last Week: Lost to Wisconsin, 5:40.52-5:41.40
This Week: at the IRA National Championship (Thursday-Saturday, Camden, N.J.)</p>

<p>Lightweight Crew (4-3)
Last Week: Defeated Penn, 5:47.58-5:56.81
This Week: at the IRA National Championship (Saturday, Camden, N.J.)</p>

<p>Intercollegiate Sailing
Last Week: Idle
This Week: ICSA National Championship (Tuesday-Friday, Annapolis, Md.)</p>

<p>Men¹s Outdoor Track & Field (8-1)
Last Week: Tied for 42nd at the NCAA East Region Championship
This Week: Idle</p>

<p>Women¹s Outdoor Track & Field (10-0)
Last Week: Tied for 56th at the NCAA East Region Championship
This Week: Idle</p>

<p>*But Hurley, Wingerd pursue dream *</p>

<p>Published in the BS:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/golf/bal-sp.golfers26may26,1,5304007.story%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/golf/bal-sp.golfers26may26,1,5304007.story&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
They are among thousands of golfers chasing a dream to make millions of dollars. They are trying to become the next Zach Johnson, who went from obscurity in the sport's minor leagues a few years ago to instant fame by winning this year's Masters.</p>

<p>Billy Hurley III, who graduated from the Naval Academy in 2004, has taken that first step, playing in seven PGA Tour events on sponsors' exemptions as well as three Nationwide Tour events while completing his postgraduate military commitment....

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Finnegan garners academic award</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Men's Lacrosse Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773</p>

<p>USILA Names Finnegan to Scholar All-America List</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Navy goalkeeper Colin Finnegan (Arnold, Md.) was one of 15 Div. I men's lacrosse players to be named a Scholar All-American by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association it was announced on Wednesday. A total of 40 student-athletes, representing Div. I, II and III, were honored.</p>

<p>Finnegan, who received his diploma from the Naval Academy just a week ago, enjoyed a successful senior campaign that saw him finally get his chance to lead the Mids from out of the goal. The first-year starter made 137 stops on the more than 420 shots he faced, finishing the year with a 58.8 save percentage, the 12th-best mark in the country. Meanwhile, he surrendered a stingy 6.46 goals per game, the nation's third-lowest goals-against average. He played one of his finest games of his career in Navy's 19-8 rout over then fifth-ranked North Carolina where he made a career-high 14 saves. In Navy's Patriot League semifinal match-up against Army, Finnegan gave up just one goal to the Black Knights, the fewest goals scored against the Midshipmen since Lafayette managed just one strike in 2005. Just hours after graduation, he played his final game alongside teammates Ian Dingman (Deferiet, N.Y.) and Billy Looney (Silver Spring, Md.) who represented the South in the annual North-South All-Star Game.</p>

<p>Graduating in the top 25 percent of his class (240th out of 1046 members), Finnegan earned a 3.51 grade-point average in English. He was named to the Commandant's List in each of the last five semesters, while earning mention on the Dean's List twice, including his final semester. Additionally, Finnegan was named to the Superintendent's List twice.</p>

<p>To be eligible for the award, the student-athlete must be an All-American or a member of the North-South All-Star Team. Additionally, the nominee must be a member of the senior class and boast a cumulative GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). Finally, the student-athlete must have behaved both on and off the field in a manner that has brought credit to himself, his institution and to collegiate lacrosse.</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy Crew Teams to Compete at IRA Regatta</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- Navy's men's crew teams will close their respective seasons this weekend when the Mids participate in the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship. The heavyweight team will be in action Thursday through Sunday on the Cooper River in Camden, N.J., while the lightweight's varsity boat will compete in a pair of races Saturday.</p>

<p>Navy's two heavyweight varsity eight boats advanced to the petite finals at the 2006 IRA event, with the first varsity crew placing 11th overall and the second varsity entry placing 10th. The first varsity boat was seeded 11th (in a field of 24) this year while the second varsity crew did not garner one of the top-12 seeds.</p>

<p>The heavyweight program will enter one crew into each of the eight classes of boats at the regatta, with several members of the lightweight team helping to complete some of the small boat lineups.</p>

<p>Navy's lightweight varsity eight boat has placed sixth in the grand final at the championship in each of the past two years after winning the title in 2004.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2007/may/30/esteros_mahoney_receives_prestigious_award_navy/?sports%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2007/may/30/esteros_mahoney_receives_prestigious_award_navy/?sports&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
The past five years haven't always been easy on David Mahoney, but if the former Navy linebacker and Estero High standout needs reassurance he's chosen the right path, he need look no further than his backseat.</p>

<p>For now, anyway.</p>

<p>"I'm in the process of moving out of my place, so that's where it's been the past week," Mahoney laughed of arguably his highest honor as a Midshipman -- the Naval Academy Athletic Association Sword for Men. "I guess I've got to hang it up, put it on a nice wooden plaque or something."...

[/quote]
</p>

<p><a href="http://www.intermatwrestle.com/news/newsdisplay.aspx?ID=5313%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.intermatwrestle.com/news/newsdisplay.aspx?ID=5313&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
It seemed like any other spring day here in northwestern Vermont; thankfully sunny, yet the air still crisp in the shadows. Trees were flowering, grass was growing, and mulch was being strewn across flower beds like a secure blanket of protection. Watching out my kitchen window as I wi***lly read through chat room banter on WrestlingReport.com, I noticed a new subject topic: *‘Doug Zembiec.’ My heart froze. Just nine days before the subject line read: ‘Travis Manion.’ Both attended the Naval Academy. Both were members of the Academy’s varsity wrestling team. Both chose commissions in the Marines upon graduation and became Marine Infantry Officers. Both were now being reported as killed in action in Iraq. My mouth is dry and my heart is now beating very fast....

[/quote]
</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Thursday, May 31, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy's Varsity Boat in Pair of Close Races on Day One of IRA Regatta</p>

<p>CAMDEN, N.J. -- Navy's heavyweight varsity boat was narrowly edged in a pair of close races Friday on the opening day of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship, being held this week on the Cooper River in Camden, N.J.</p>

<p>The varsity crew began the day by recording a time of 5:40.837 to place third in its trial heat Thursday morning, with the Navy entry finishing three seconds in back of defending-champion California and less than one second behind sixth-seeded Princeton. </p>

<p>Navy had a good start to its race and held a slim lead over the field during the second 500 meters of the course, but Cal would take the lead around the midpoint in the race. Navy held onto second place over Princeton until the last 20 strokes of the course when the Tigers rowed past the Mids. Cal posted a winning time of 5:37.833, Princeton placed second with a clocking of 5:38.988 and Navy finished third with a time of 5:40.837.</p>

<p>"We lost to Princeton by 13.5 seconds at the start of the season, so to have a lead over them until the very end of the race shows the great improvement we have had since early in the year," said Navy head coach Rick Clothier. "Our goal was to win the race, however, so we were disappointed by the result." </p>

<p>The Golden Bears and the Tigers advanced directly into Friday's championship semifinal races (where all 12 boats are guaranteed a spot in either the grand or petite final on Saturday), while the third-place finish sent the Mids into one of the repechage races Thursday afternoon. </p>

<p>The Mids held an early lead of about three seats over Northeastern during that repechage race, but the Huskies slowly started to cut into the Navy advantage and the two boats were even going into the final 500 meters of the course. As in the morning race, a stronger sprint by the Huskies gave them a victory over the Mids by 1.3 seconds, a time which translates to about a one-third of a boat length advantage at the finish line.</p>

<p>"We found ourselves in a fast heat and Northeastern had a little more left in their tanks at the end than we did," said Clothier. "Our guys rowed their hearts out in both races today, so I am proud of them for that."</p>

<p>Navy's second-place time of 5:43.412 would have been good enough to win any of the three additional repechage races on the day, which would have allowed Navy to compete in one of the championship semifinal races. With the second-place finish, however, the Mids find themselves in one of Friday's consolation semifinal races.</p>

<p>Navy's second varsity and freshman eight boats both had the same placings in their races as the varsity crew did Thursday and will also race in a consolation semifinal Friday.</p>

<p>The program's most successful crew on the day was its varsity four without coxswain boat, which won its trial heat by 2.2 seconds and earned a berth in Saturday's grand final.</p>

<p>Also placing well Thursday was Navy's freshman four boat, which finished in second place in both its trial heat and repechage race to advance to Friday's championship semifinal.</p>

<p>First Varsity Eight
Trial Heat -- 3rd of 6 -- (3) California, 5:37.833; (6) Princeton, 5:38.988; (11) Navy, 5:40.837; Oregon State, 5:48.380; Georgetown, 5:51.904; Virginia, 5:56.262
Repechage Race -- 2nd of 4 -- Northeastern, 5:42.197; (11) Navy, 5:43.412; Boston Univ., 5:51.462; Dartmouth, 6:11.842
Friday's Schedule -- Consolation Semifinal (12:36 p.m.)</p>

<p>Second Varsity Eight
Trial Heat -- 3rd of 6 -- (1) Wisconsin, 5:47.806; (9) Syracuse, 5:51.913; Navy, 5:55.190; Delaware, 5:58.965; Michigan, 6:00.038; (8) Georgetown, 6:01.524
Repechage Race -- 2nd of 4 -- Yale B, 5:50.279; Navy, 5:53.277; (12) Columbia, 6:14.606
Friday's Schedule -- Consolation Semifinal (1:24 p.m.)</p>

<p>Freshman Eight
Trial Heat -- 3rd of 6 -- (4) Washington, 5:48.506; (5) Princeton, 5:55.689; (12) Navy, 6:01.924; Syracuse, 6:08.077; Delaware, 6:12.323; Rutgers, 6:13.998
Repechage Race -- 2nd of 4 -- George Washington, 5:54.840; (12) Navy, 5:59.324; Dartmouth, 6:08.496; Michigan, 6:10.120
Friday's Schedule -- Consolation Semifinal (11:36 a.m.)</p>

<p>Varsity Four with Coxswain
Time Trial -- 25th of 31 -- 5:47.769
Friday's Schedule -- E Level Final (3:12 p.m.)</p>

<p>Varsity Four without Coxswain
Trial Heat -- 1st of 6 -- 6:15.890; Syracuse, 6:18.064; Wisconsin, 6:26.014; Harvard, 6:28.821; Georgetown, 6:46.387; Lehigh, 6:50.720
Friday's Schedule -- Bye
Saturday's Schedule -- Grand Final (11:14 a.m.)</p>

<p>Open Four with Coxswain
Trial Heat -- 5th of 6 -- Cornell, 6:38.566; Syracuse, 6:42.177; Wisconsin B, 6:43.330; Yale, 6:56.263; Navy, 7:04.264; Boston Univ., 7:15.844
Friday's Schedule -- Repechage Race (8:12 a.m.)</p>

<p>Freshman Four with Coxswain
Trial Heat -- 2nd of 5 -- Boston Univ., 6:37.655; Navy, 6:38.888; UCLA, 6:55.881; Dartmouth, 7:07.151; Fordham, 7:14.172
Repechage Race -- 2nd of 4 -- Princeton, 6:39.717; Navy, 6:42.363; Cornell, 6:42.498; Minnesota, 7:07.351
Friday's Schedule -- Championship Semifinal (9 a.m.)</p>

<p>Varsity Pair without Coxswain
Trial Heat -- 5th of 6 -- Wisconsin, 6:59.011; Cornell, 7:08.608; Long Beach State, 7:14.201; Rutgers, 7:18.055; Navy, 7:22.903; Georgetown, 7:28.621
Friday's Schedule -- Repechage Race (7:36 a.m.)</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- The Navy intercollegiate sailing team enters the final day of the ICSA / Gill National Coed Dinghy Championship in ninth place after two days of competition. Action will take place all day on Friday on the Severn River in Annapolis. Charleston, with 168 points, owns a slim four-point advantage over Dartmouth. Navy has accumulated 237 points, four points ahead of 10th-place Harvard.</p>

<p>In the 14-race A Division, Andrew Vann and Krysta Anthony sit in eighth place with 114 points. The duo finished the day strong after a slow start. In the first seven races of the day, scoring 90 of its 114 points. However, the pair picked it up in the latter races, claiming four top-five finishes and taking the top spot in the final divisional race of the day. The total pushed the duo from the bottom four sailors into the top 10. </p>

<p>In the 14-race B Division, five different Navy sailors combined for 123 points. It was the complete opposite as the A Division, as the B group got off to a strong start, recording six top-seven finishes in the first eight divisional races. However, in races 9-12, the Mids finished 10th, 14th, 16th and 14th to halt its progress. The group regained its composure and finished fourth and eighth in the final two races to help Navy to a ninth-place finish after Thursday's action.</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Saturday, June 2, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy Varsity Eight Places 14th Overall, Varsity Four Boat Wins Title at IRA Regatta</p>

<p>CAMDEN, N.J. - The final day of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship came to a close Saturday with Navy's heavyweight varsity eight boat placing second in the third level final and its varsity four without coxswain crew winning the grand final.</p>

<p>The three-day championship was contested on the Cooper River in Camden, N.J.</p>

<p>"It was a gutsy three days of rowing for our varsity crew," said Navy head coach Rick Clothier. "They went full throttle in every one of their races during the regatta. The effort they put into attempting to win each race didn't show up in the results, but I am very proud of them for how hard they competed. Several coaches made the same comment to me about their efforts, so it did not go unrecognized."</p>

<p>In Saturday's third level final, the Mids held a two-seat advantage after 500 meters then found themselves up by only one seat over Boston University at the halfway point of the course. It stayed that way until the 500-meter mark of the course when the two boats were even with each other. The Terriers were able to outsprint the Mids across the finish line to defeat the Navy entry by just under two seconds.</p>

<p>The Navy program was able to celebrate three victories on the final day of competition. The varsity four without coxswain boat won the grand final of its division by 3.7 seconds over second-place Hobart, the freshman four crew edged Grand Valley State by one-tenth of a second to win the petite final of its flight and the second varsity eight boat won its third level final by nearly two seconds.</p>

<p>Also racing in a petite final on the day was the varsity pair crew, which placed fourth in the race and 10th overall at the regatta.</p>

<p>Rounding out the Navy results was the open four with coxswain crew placing 14th and the freshman eight entry placing 15th.</p>

<p>First Varsity Eight - 14th place overall
Third Level Final - 2nd of 6 - Boston Univ., 5:44.678; Navy, 5:46.558; Virginia, 5:47.088; Georgetown, 5:48.685; Syracuse, 5:48.922; Penn, 5:49.180</p>

<p>Second Varsity Eight - 13th place overall
Third Level Final - 1st of 6 - Navy, 5:53.984; Michigan, 5:55.747; Georgetown, 5:58.302; Delaware, 5:59.067; George Washington, 6:01.784; Princeton, 6:04.649</p>

<p>Freshman Eight - 15th place overall
Third Level Final - 3rd of 6 - Wisconsin, 5:54.788; Columbia, 5:59.286; Navy, 6:02.657; Syracuse, 6:04.989; Boston Univ., 6:09.451; Dartmouth, 6:13.592</p>

<p>Varsity Four with Coxswain - 25th place overall
Won E Level Final Friday</p>

<p>Varsity Four without Coxswain - 1st place overall
Grand Final - 1st of 5 - Navy, 6:18.138; Hobart, 6:21.842; Syracuse, 6:22.466; Wisconsin, 6:23.419; Colgate, 6:27.879</p>

<p>Open Four with Coxswain - 14th place overall
Third Level Final - 2nd of 5 - Michigan, 7:00.217; Navy, 7:03.605; Boston Univ., 7:09.260; Dartmouth, 7:12.977; Penn, 7:16.152</p>

<p>Freshman Four with Coxswain - 7th place overall
Petite Final - 1st of 6 - Navy, 6:38.445; Grand Valley State, 6:38.571; MIT, 6:38.748; Orange Coast, 6:43.997; George Washington, 6:47.195; Temple, 6:50.752</p>

<p>Varsity Pair without Coxswain - 10th place overall
Petite Final - 4th of 6 - Georgia Tech, 7:00.101; Buffalo, 7:01.545; USC, 7:03.867; Navy, 7:16.410; Long Beach State, 7:18.073; Rutgers, 7:20.539</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Saturday, June 2, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy Lights Place Sixth at IRA Regatta</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The Navy lightweight crew team saw its varsity eight boat place sixth in the grand final of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship Saturday on the Cooper River in Camden, N.J. It marked the third-straight year the Mids have placed sixth at the event.</p>

<p>Navy comfortably, finished in third place during its trial heat, finishing three seconds in back of second-place Dartmouth and seven seconds in front of fourth-place Columbia, which advanced the boat into the grand final.</p>

<p>Cornell would go on to win the grand final with a time of 5:46.344, with Navy completing the 2,000-meter course in a time of 5:52.185.</p>

<p>"We're disappointed by our final result," said Navy head coach Rob Friedrich. "We had a great few weeks of training heading into this week, and had a good, controlled heat this morning which we felt set us up well going into the grand final."</p>

<p>In addition to the varsity eight race, members of the lightweight program also comprised Navy's entry in the varsity four without coxswain division. The crew won its initial heat Thursday to advance into Saturday's grand final, then posted a win today by three seconds over second-place Hobart.</p>

<p>"We're very happy for our straight four crew," said Friedrich. "They really dominated the racing today. They won a gold medal a few weeks ago at the Eastern Sprints as members of our second varsity crew, so to cap off their season with a win today is a great accomplishment. </p>

<p>"That entire crew will return for us next year, so we are excited about their opportunity to compete for seats in our varsity boat."</p>

<p>Varsity Eight - 6th place overall
Trial Heat - 3rd of 6 - Harvard, 5:49.904; Dartmouth, 5:51.314; Navy, 5:54.171; Columbia, 6:01.076; Delaware, 6:05.094; Georgia Tech, 6:07.911
Grand Final - 6th of 6 - Cornell, 5:46.344; Harvard, 5:47.466; Georgetown, 5:47.495; Dartmouth, 5:48.486; Yale, 5:51.813; Navy, 5:52.185 </p>

<p>Varsity Four without Coxswain - 1st place overall
Grand Final - 1st of 5 - Navy, 6:18.138; Hobart, 6:21.842; Syracuse, 6:22.466; Wisconsin, 6:23.419; Colgate, 6:27.879</p>

<p>2007 NCAA Division I Men's Outdoor Track & Field Championship</p>

<p>Dates: Wednesday, June 6, through Saturday, June 9
Stadium: Alex G. Spanos Sports Complex
Site: Sacramento, Calif.
Navy Competitor (Event): Paul Harris (800-meter Run)
800-meter Run First Round: Wednesday, June 6, 6:40 p.m. ET
800-meter Run Semifinal Round: Thursday, June 7, 7:50 p.m. ET
800-meter Run Final Round: Saturday, June 9, 1:19 p.m. ET</p>

<p>Mids Making 35th Appearance on National Stage</p>

<p>The Navy men's outdoor track & field will make its 35th trip to the NCAA Championship this week, as Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) will take part in the 800-meter run. The Midshipmen have made it to the national championship for back-to-back years and in three of their last-four campaigns.</p>

<p>800-meter Run Championship Format</p>

<p>The first round of the 800-meter run will have four heats, with the top-three runners in each section and the next four-fastest times advancing to the semifinal round. The semifinals will have two eight-runner sections, with the top-three competitors in each heat and the next two-best times will qualify for the finals. The top-six runners in the final round will earn All-America status.</p>

<p>Harris' Road to the NCAA Championship</p>

<p>Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) originally qualified for the NCAA East Region Championship with his 1:48.86 showing at the Florida Relays on April 6. One month later at the IC4A Championship, Harris improved his seeding with a school-record 1:47.55 clocking during the preliminary round. At the NCAA East Region Championship, Harris paced the field in his preliminary round heat with a time of 1:48.77 to advance to the finals. One day later, the Navy junior crossed the finish line in 1:48.96 to grab the fifth and final automatic bid to the NCAA Championship, 0.01-second ahead of sixth-place finisher James Gurr from Seton Hall.</p>

<p>Seventh in the Nation</p>

<p>Paul Harris' (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) 1:47.55 showing in the preliminary round of the IC4A Championship ranks him as the seventh-fastest runner in the nation this year. His time was tops in the East Region and only 0.71-second off Andrew Ellerton's national-best time of 1:46.84 from Michigan.</p>

<p>Back-to-Back NCAA Championships</p>

<p>Navy's Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) will be representing the Midshipmen at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championship for the second-consecutive year this week. At the 2006 national championship, Harris completed the 800-meter run in 1:50.13 during the prelims and narrowly missed advancing to the semifinal round. Harris is the first Navy runner since John Mentzer in the 10,000-meter run from 1997-98 to make consecutive appearances at the outdoor national championship.</p>

<p>All-American Twice in One Year?</p>

<p>Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) has the opportunity to become the eighth Navy men's track & field competitor to earn All-America status in both the indoor and outdoor seasons of the same year. Harris captured All-America honors in the 800-meter run during the indoor national championship with his sixth-place finish during the finals.</p>

<p>Navy Indoor and Outdoor All-Americans in Same Year
Year Name Indoor Event Outdoor Event
1969 Edwin Potts Weight Throw Hammer Throw
1973 Ted Bregar Weight Throw Hammer Throw
1981 Leo Williams High Jump High Jump
1982 Leo Williams High Jump High Jump
1983 Leo Williams High Jump High Jump
1987 Ron Harris 3,000-meter Run 5,000-meter Run
1992 Greg Keller Mile Run 3,000-meter Steeplechase
1993 Greg Keller Mile Run 3,000-meter Steeplechase
1993 Todd Washburn 5,000-meter Run 5,000-meter Run
1997 John Mentzer 5,000-meter Run 10,000-meter Run</p>

<p>Breaking the 1:49.00 Barrier</p>

<p>Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) has cracked the 1:49.00 mark in the 800-meter run five times during his career, four of which have come this season. The Navy junior owns the school’s five-fastest times in the event, highlighted by a school-record 1:47.55 showing during the 2007 IC4A Championship. Prior to his arrival to the Naval Academy in the summer of 2004, no runner in school history had run a sub-1:49.00 time in the 800-meter run.</p>

<p>Navy Sailing Concludes Season at ICSA Nationals</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- One year of hard work and training culminated this week as the US Naval Academy Dinghy Sailing Team hosted the 2007 Intercollegiate Sailing Association Spring Nationals. The Academy hosted two of the three major events of the National Championships, the APS Team Racing Nationals that took place on May 27-29 and the Gill Coed Dinghy Nationals running from May 30-June 1. Teams from across the country representing all regions of college sailing converged on the Severn River to compete for college sailing's greatest prize over the last week.</p>

<p>As usual, the traditional end of May breeze, in Annapolis presented a bit of a challenge to the race committees. However, the Midshipmen and volunteers running the regatta performed exceptionally well in trying conditions and put together an outstanding regatta with square courses and great sailing.</p>

<p>Competitors battled through the entire regatta week. The final standings were contested all the way to the end. St. Mary's College (Md.) emerged victorious in the Team Racing Nationals after entering the final round of four in a three-way tie for the title. Entering the final day of racing for the Coed Nationals, the top three teams (College of Charleston, Dartmouth and UC Irvine) were only separated by a sixteen points with four races left to be sailed in each division. The Coed Championship came down to the last race and beyond. College of Charleston was winning by one point at the end of racing, but there was a protest to be heard keeping the competitors on pins and needles. In the end, Charleston kept their finish and won the regatta with Dartmouth coming in second.</p>

<br>


<br>

<p>Team Racing Results
Win Loss
1 St. Mary's 12 5
2 Yale 11 6
3 Hobart/ WmSmith 11 6
4 Harvard 9 7 </p>

<hr>

<p>5 Dartmouth 7 7
6 Charleston 5 9
7 South Florida 3 11
8 Navy 3 11</p>

<hr>

<p>9 USC 5 0
10 Texas A&M Galveston 4 1
11 Michigan 3 2
12 Wisconsin 2 3
13 Washington 1 4
14 Texas 0 5</p>

<p>Gill Coed Dinghy Results
A B TOT</p>

<ol>
<li>Charleston 75 150 225</li>
<li>Dartmouth 133 101 234</li>
<li>Yale 161 76 237</li>
<li>UC/Irvine 126 111 237</li>
<li>Boston College 121 131 252</li>
<li>St. Mary's 146 123 269</li>
<li>Brown 134 139 273</li>
<li>Georgetown 135 145 280</li>
<li>Navy 138 159 297

<ol>
<li>Harvard 163 138 301</li>
<li>Hobart/WmSmith 111 223 334</li>
<li>Stanford 191 150 341</li>
<li>South Florida 212 172 384</li>
<li>Texas A&M Galveston 234 184 418</li>
<li>South Alabama 194 296 490</li>
<li>Wisconsin 274 219 493</li>
<li>U/Washington 240 290 530</li>
<li>Notre Dame 291 273 564</li>
</ol></li>
</ol>

<p>Overall Navy Sports Record, 297-156-3 (.655)</p>

<p>Heavyweight Crew (4-4)
Last Week: Finished 14th out of 24 teams at the IRA Regatta
This Week: Season concluded</p>

<p>Lightweight Crew (4-3)
Last Week: Finished sixth out of 12 teams at the IRA Regatta
This Week: Season concluded</p>

<p>Intercollegiate Sailing
Last Week: Finished eighth out of 14 teams in team racing and ninth out of 18 in Coed Dinghy at the ICSA Nationals
This Week: Season concluded</p>

<p>Offshore Sailing
Last Week: Competed in the 2007 Annapolis to Newport Race (no results reported)
This Week: Season concluded</p>

<p>Men¹s Outdoor Track & Field (8-1)
Last Week: Idle
This Week: at the NCAA Championship (Wednesday-Saturday, all day, Sacramento, Calif.)</p>

<p>Published in the San Diego Union-Tribune:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/college_football/20070606-9999-1s6loccol.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/college_football/20070606-9999-1s6loccol.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
The San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl is seeking to replace its at-large berth in 2008 and 2009 with the sixth-place team in the Pac-10 Conference. </p>

<p>In its first two years, the Poinsettia Bowl has matched a Mountain West team against an at-large team: Navy in 2005 and Northern Illinois last year. Bowl officials hope a matchup between the MWC and Pac-10 would draw more regional interest....

[/quote]
</p>

<p><a href="http://gopurpleaces.com/article.asp?articleid=86134%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://gopurpleaces.com/article.asp?articleid=86134&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
University of Evansville women’s basketball coach Tricia Cullop has named former Navy assistant coach and recruiting coordinator Darrah Metz as the newest member of the Purple Aces’ coaching staff.</p>

<p>Metz (first name pronounced “DARE-uh”) joins the UE program from the United States Naval Academy, where she served three years as the women’s basketball program’s recruiting coordinator. While at Navy, Metz helped coach three all-Patriot League performers including 2007 All-Lowe’s Senior CLASS honoree Kate Hobbs, who was one of five players nationwide to be honored for their work both on the court, in the community, and in the classroom....

[/quote]
</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Contact: Jonathan Maggart (410) 293-8771</p>

<p>Harris Competes at NCAA Championship</p>

<p>SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Navy men’s track & field middle distance runner Paul Harris (Jr./Woodbury, Minn.) placed fourth in his NCAA Championship preliminary round heat of the 800-meter run and narrowly missed qualification for the national semifinals on Wednesday at Sacramento State’s Alex G. Spanos Sports Complex.</p>

<p>Harris finished the 800-meter run with a time of 1:50.03, less than .01-second off Tennessee runner Yarrick Kincaid’s semifinal-qualifying, third-place time. The Navy junior led with 100 meters to go and finished a mere .05-second off Duane Solomon’s first-place showing for Southern Cal. Harris’ time placed him 21st amongst all runners on Wednesday afternoon.</p>

<p>The top-three runners in each of the four heats and the next-four fastest times qualified for the national semifinal.</p>

<p>Harris became the first Navy runner since John Mentzer in 1997-98 to make back-to-back appearances to the outdoor national championship. The Midshipmen made their second-straight NCAA Championship appearance and their third over the last four years on Wednesday.</p>

<p><a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=2894773%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=2894773&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>
[quote]
"I think this is a common misnomer for many people. Colleges do not just throw out the admissions rule book when it comes to athletes. Every school has their minimum standards for admission and these are rarely breached. For most high school students, college admission is a competitive process and just meeting the minimum usually will not get you in a school. That being said, it is probably true that many athletes with less than competitive academic records (which still meet the minimum) are admitted into schools based on athletic merit. While I've said before that colleges are of course primarily academic institutions, there is no denying that athletics also play a major role, especially in the fund-raising department. Therefore, it shouldn't surprise or appall us to think that certain student's athletic abilities carry as much weight as their academic abilities. I think many idealists would say admissions should be solely based on academics. I would probably ask them how excited they were the last time their alma mater defeated their archrival in an football game and then ask them how they think their star quarterback got in the school."
-- Tyler Tidwell, Navy football

[/quote]
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