Stamford Advocate

Army-Navy game features something radically different: A home field NAVY at ARMY

-

They will play the 121st Army-Navy game on Saturday afternoon, but it won’t look or feel the way ArmyNavy is supposed to look or feel. The coronaviru­s strikes again.

Still, they will play. They won’t play in Philadelph­ia, where 89 of the 120 previous games have taken place and where this year’s game was supposed to be played. There won’t be the normal crowd of 70,000 people in attendance, with traffic jams four hours before kickoff so fans can get into the stadium to watch the Corps of Cadets and the Brigade of Midshipmen march onto the field.

Instead, the game will be played at Michie Stadium, on post at West Point in New York, arguably the most scenic football stadium in the country, but a place that has hosted Army-Navy just once — in 1943, during World War II.

There will be about 9,000 spectators in the stadium — including about 4,300 from the Corps of Cadets and 4,300 from the Brigade of Midshipmen. Each school will be allowed about 200 VIPs, who will watch from glassed-in luxury boxes after going through rapidresul­t coronaviru­s testing that morning at the Thayer Hotel, which sits just inside the gate named for Sylvanus Thayer, known as the father of the academy.

The two athletic directors — Army’s Mike Buddie and Navy’s Chet Gladchuck — began discussing the possibilit­y of moving the game this past June, when it became apparent that the pandemic was going to have a major impact on the college football season.

“We had two goals that were absolute,” Buddie said. “The first was to play the game. If we could each play only one game all season, we had to find a way to play Army-Navy. The second was to make sure that the Brigade and the Corps could be at the game.”

It was the second goal that brought about the venue change. As the season moved along, it became more and more apparent that local protocols would make it difficult to allow very many people into the stadium. Officials in Philadelph­ia let Buddie and Gladchuck know in October they were virtually certain the game would have to be played in an empty or near-empty Lincoln Financial Field.

The question then became, where to play?

In the end, the only answer was Michie Stadium.

Any other venue, including Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, would be subject to local COVID-related protocols. Michie Stadium is located on an Army post and, as a result, is a U.S. government installati­on, not subject to local protocols. Navy’s stadium, on the other hand, is located about a mile from Gate 8 of The Yard. It sits on land that is part of the state of Maryland and therefore is subject to local protocols. In fact, after being allowed to attend several home games this fall, the Brigade was not allowed in for Navy’s final home game last week against Tulsa.

“The fact that it was supposed to be our home game probably made it easier to make the decision for both Chet and me,” Buddie said. “But even if it had been Navy’s home game, there still wouldn’t

Saturday, 3 p.m. (CBS) have been any other choice. It just might have made it a little harder for us to get to that conclusion.”

“Home game” in ArmyNavy lingo means that side wears home uniforms, occupies the larger locker room at whichever NFL stadium the game is played and marches on the field first — nothing that directly affects the playing of the game. The number of tickets are split evenly for both teams and the roars alternate from one side of the stadium to the other.

This year will be no different. The Corps of Cadets will sit on the home team side of the stadium; the Brigade opposite. For every Army VIP added to the list of invitees, Navy added one of its own.

“The only advantage that we’ll have is that our players won’t have to travel,” Buddie said. “But it won’t be that different for the Navy players than it is in a normal year.”

Buddie and Gladchuck discussed whether to allow players’ families into the stadium — something they clearly wanted to do if at all possible. In the end, they decided against it for two reasons. “Because our players are so far-flung, many families would have to travel by plane to get to the game,” Buddie said. “That was a concern.”

The other was more basic. Michie Stadium is winterized after Thanksgivi­ng, meaning the plumbing in the upper deck is shut down. “I’m sure the family members wouldn’t have minded going down three levels to go the bathroom,” Buddie said. “But they’d have to interact with the students when they got there.”

Once the decision was made Oct. 23 to move the game to West Point, logistics had to be pieced together: a hotel for the Navy team; testing for everyone coming on post; alerting the Secret Service, which always plans for the president (or this year potentiall­y the president-elect) to come to the game — and figuring out how to tell those who couldn’t come why they couldn’t.

The more than 4,000 members of the brigade will travel by bus from Annapolis to West Point “super early” Saturday morning, according to the Navy Public Affairs Office.

Their destinatio­n will make this game stand out after more than 75 years of neutral fields. For security reasons, the Army-Navy games were played on home fields in 1942 and 1943: Navy’s Thompson Stadium, which was on the Yard, hosted the first year;

Michie Stadium the next.

The thought of playing on either home field vanished after World War II because the game was too big — and the moneymakin­g potential too great. It has been played since then in Philadelph­ia (most years), the Meadowland­s, Baltimore, Pasadena, Calif., and Washington — if you count Prince George’s County as Washington.

In 1999, Sports Illustrate­d picked Michie Stadium as the third-greatest sports venue in the world — behind only Yankee Stadium and Augusta National Golf Club. Personally, I’d rank Michie ahead of both those places. It is fantastica­lly scenic, with both Lusk Reservoir and the Hudson River visible from the home side of the stadium and soaring trees dominating the view behind the north end. Most importantl­y, there is the quality of people who play their home games there.

That will be the case again Saturday — for both teams. The game should be competitiv­e. During a 14season stretch from 2002 to 2015, Navy (under coaches Paul Johnson and Ken Niumatalol­o) so dominated the series that the game lost some of its luster, because it was frequently well in hand before the fourth quarter started. That began to change in 2014, when Army hired Jeff Monken — a former assistant under Johnson at both Navy and Georgia Tech — and he turned the program around.

After losing close games in 2014 and 2015, Army finally broke the streak in 2016 and then won again the next two years. In doing so, the Black Knights won back-to-back Commanderi­n-Chief’s Trophies for the first time. Navy won 31-7 last year to reclaim both the CIC and, as Niumatalol­o put it, “our dominance.”

In this strange fall, the Mids are 3-6 and have struggled to find an effective quarterbac­k, with last year’s starter Malcolm Perry now playing for the Miami Dolphins. Niumatalol­o has tried everyone this side of Roger Staubach to replace him. Army has also used a multitude of quarterbac­ks — six in all — but that’s mostly been because of injuries. The Black Knights, who had nine of the 12 games on their original schedule wiped out by the coronaviru­s, are 7-2 but have not played nearly as challengin­g a slate as Navy.

All the Army-Navy traditions are expected to be in place Saturday: the marchons; the parachutis­ts; the flyovers; and, of course, the playing of the alma maters at game’s end.

It won’t feel the same. It won’t be the same. But it will be Army-Navy. And there’s still nothing else in sports quite like it.

 ?? Mike Lawrie / Getty Images ?? West Point’s Michie Stadium will host this year’s Army-Navy football game on Saturday.
Mike Lawrie / Getty Images West Point’s Michie Stadium will host this year’s Army-Navy football game on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States