Stamford Advocate

Academy players, ex-coach recall horrific day

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On a clear day, the New York skyline is visible from the top of Army’s Michie Stadium at West Point.

So after the second plane hit the World Trade Center, former Black Knights coach Todd Berry ran to the top. Some of his staff members, too.

To watch in horror. In fear. In disbelief.

The awful impact of the 2001 terrorist attacks can be gauged in countless ways. Some measure it in what was lost that day and in the days that followed. Others look to America’s resolve and response.

For Berry and others in charge of the hundreds of young athletes at the nation’s three service academies that day, the memories that have stuck are tinged with sadness, anger and, above all, immense pride in watching their players realize that their mission to protect their country had suddenly been put front and center. And they were ready for it.

“There was a little bit of a comfort level in knowing,” Berry said, “that’s the group that’s going to respond to this crisis.”

There will be football games played around the country on Saturday, the 20th anniversar­y of the attacks, and those games include Air Force at Navy and Army hosting Western Kentucky. There will be powerful tributes and memorials to remember those lost at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and in a field in rural Pennsylvan­ia, along with first responders who rushed to help.

The truth is, what happened that day is never far from anyone’s mind at the academies.

The significan­ce didn’t really fully hit senior linebacker Demonte Meeks until he arrived at Air Force. Only through time has he understood the magnitude.

“Once you realize the amount of pain that went into this event and the amount of people that are still going through it, that’s when you start to realize it,” Meeks said. “For me, it really hit home when everyone started graduating and commission­ing and it’s like, ‘Dang, these people have a job and actually have a role to fill.’ That’s where I’m sitting at right now.”

For Berry, this will always remain rooted in his heart: That midnight vigil at Army after the attacks — cadets

heard but not seen in the dark until a spotlight shined on them. There were bagpipes and the drum corps playing “Amazing Grace,” with an American flag punctuatin­g the moment.

“At the end of the vigil,” Berry recalled, halting as he fought back tears, “the Corps of Cadets just broke out into the alma mater spontaneou­sly. It just was such a moving moment because you recognized for that group that their whole life just changed at that moment.”

Navy senior linebacker John Kelly III was born and raised on Staten Island, New York. His father was — and remains — a firefighte­r for Engine 201 in Brooklyn. His dad was at a golf outing as part of a fundraiser for firefighte­rs in need on the day of the attacks.

“Once everything happened, he came right home, kissed me and my mom and my other brother Patrick goodbye,” Kelly said. “Took his stuff, went in, and my mom had to say her prayers.”

Kelly’s father headed to ground zero to help. He survived that day, but four members of his firehouse didn’t.

Kelly, who was 20 months old at the time, grew up with constant reminders of 9/11. Jake Siller was Kelly’s best friend growing up, and his father Stephen was a firefighte­r who died that day. So was the father of Kelly’s girlfriend.

The tragedy played a big role in leading Kelly to Navy, one of the untold numbers of service academy enlistees who — as Army coach Jeff Monken puts it — “will run toward trouble and when they know others are in danger they’ll be there to serve.”

Navy punter Kellen Grave de Peralta was born on July 25, 2001. His mother, Tiffany, who worked at the Pentagon as a human resources officer, happened to be on maternity leave with him and not in the building on Sept. 11. His father, Ricardo, is a former Navy SEAL who was in Virginia training with an FBI SWAT team that day.

“Once he received word of the attacks, they immediatel­y raced back to D.C., and he actually ended up passing the Pentagon that was on fire at the time,” Grave de Peralta said. “Two weeks later, he was assigned to the 9/11 investigat­ion and spent the next two-plus years helping put four al-Qaida terrorists, who were part of the 9/11 plot, in Guantanamo Bay.”

The attacks played a role in former quarterbac­k Tim Jefferson Jr.’s decision to join the Air Force.

In seventh grade, he was picked up by his mom soon after a camping trip in Georgia when she burst into tears. That wasn’t like her. He was stunned. When they got home, she told him to go outside and play basketball.

Only later did he realize why. They had relatives in New York City and she was franticall­y trying to reach them. They were safe.

The moment crystalize­d one thing: He wanted to defend this country for his mom. For his family. For everyone.

The versatile QB who etched his name into Air Force’s record books over his playing career (2008-11) became a fighter pilot — call sign “Blitz.” He’s been deployed to Afghanista­n. He now trains the next generation of fighter pilots at Sheppard Air Force Base in Texas.

 ?? Chris Gardner / Associated Press ?? The American flag flies with a background of Navy midshipmen during the national anthem at the 102nd Army-Navy NCAA football game in Philadelph­ia on Dec. 1, 2001. Twenty years later, former Army football coach Todd Berry still gets choked up thinking about that Sept. 11, 2001, day and the terrorist attacks carried out not only on the twin towers at the World Trade Center but at the Pentagon, and in a field in rural Pennsylvan­ia.
Chris Gardner / Associated Press The American flag flies with a background of Navy midshipmen during the national anthem at the 102nd Army-Navy NCAA football game in Philadelph­ia on Dec. 1, 2001. Twenty years later, former Army football coach Todd Berry still gets choked up thinking about that Sept. 11, 2001, day and the terrorist attacks carried out not only on the twin towers at the World Trade Center but at the Pentagon, and in a field in rural Pennsylvan­ia.

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