The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Army assails Navy for 3rd year in a row

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA — Army coach Jeff Monken hopped on top of a wall and pumped his fist toward stoked cadets set to belt out the alma mater. Monken brought the party to the locker room and waved an “Army Football” flag as the Black Knights bounced around him.

Army ditched its mundane routines and cut loose like a bunch of rowdy civilians. And why not? The setting was right after Army beat Navy for the third straight game, this time in front of a packed house and the president.

“I don’t ever want our guys to stop celebratin­g,” Monken said. “I promise you, I’ll be celebratin­g every year if we win this thing because I know how hard it is.”

Monken resuscitat­ed the Black Knights and turned a program that suffered annual losses to the Midshipmen into a bowl-bound team that can keep the Commander-in-Chief ’s Trophy back at West Point.

The No. 22 Black Knights recovered two fumbles in the fourth quarter, Kelvin Hopkins Jr. had two rushing touchdowns and Army beat Navy 17-10 on Saturday to win its third straight game in the series.

President Donald Trump attended the 119th game between the rivals and flipped the coin before spending a half on each side in a show of impartiali­ty. No matter his view, Army (10-2) always had the edge.

Army retained the CIC Trophy — awarded to the team with the best record in games among the three service academies — after winning it for the first time in 22 years last season and snuffed a late Navy (3-10) rally to retain possession of the patriotic prize

With Navy down 10-7, quarterbac­k Zach Abey lost a fumble on fourth-and-12 deep in its own territory. Hopkins would score on a 1-yard run to make it 17-7 and give Army the cushion it needed to win in front of 66,729 fans at Lincoln Financial Field.

Army hopped and waved hands in celebratio­n during a replay timeout and got the cadets in the stands to bounce along. They had good reason to celebrate: Army has regained its grip in a series that had gotten out of hand. Navy had a seriesbest 14-game winning streak from 2002-2015 and leads the series leads 60-52-7.

“It’s been hard on all of us. Our players, our coaches, our staff, our school,” coach Ken Niumatalol­o said. “We like to win. We’ve been winning a lot of games. Losing sucks.”

Trump sat on the Army side in the first half and crossed the field to the Navy side at halftime. Trump officiated the coin toss and was introduced by public address announcer Dan Baker to a cheering crowd.

Navy won Trump’s toss and elected to kick off. That was a mistake. Kell Walker ran 51 yards to the 10 on the fourth play from scrimmage and Hopkins dashed in for the TD on the next play for a 7-0 lead.

“I think anything I did was just within the game plan,” said Hopkins, the game’s MVP.

In a series steeped in tradition — the “March On” and drumline battles, among them — perhaps none is more ingrained than the running game. Last year’s game had a combined three pass attempts and quarterbac­ks for each team are usually the leading rushers. But Army and Navy passed on the rush and tried to throw, with mixed results. Army safety Jaylon McClinton had an intercepti­on in the first half. Army also dropped a key third-down pass that led to John Abercrombi­e’s missed 33-yard field goal in the second quarter.

Abercrombi­e rebounded to kick a 33-yarder in the third for a 10-0 lead.

Last season’s game was an instant classic and was decided by a field goal: Bennett Moehring narrowly missed a 48-yarder in the snow on the final play and Army held off Navy 14-13.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Jaxson Deaton (73), Bryce Holland (65) and Gavyn Jones of Army react after a fourth-quarter touchdown sinks Navy on Saturday in Philadelph­ia,
GETTY IMAGES Jaxson Deaton (73), Bryce Holland (65) and Gavyn Jones of Army react after a fourth-quarter touchdown sinks Navy on Saturday in Philadelph­ia,

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