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DOOR OPENS FOR U.S. MILITARY ATHLETES

- By lolita c. Baldor The Associated Press

ASHINGTON—Defense Secretary Mark Esper has opened the door for athletes at the nation’s military academies to play profession­al sports after they graduate, and delay their active-duty service.

Esper signed a memo last Friday laying out the new guidelines, which says the athletes must get approval from the defense secretary, and it requirea them to eventually fulfill their military obligation or repay the costs of their education.

The memo, obtained by

The Associated Press, came at the insistence of President Donald Trump, who directed the Pentagon in June to come up with a way to allow athletes to play profession­al sports immediatel­y upon graduation. Trump gave the Pentagon four months to develop the new policy.

Allowing athletes to delay service has been a hotly debated issue. The Obama administra­tion put a policy in place allowing some athletes to go to the pros and defer their military service.

That policy allowed Navy quarterbac­k Keenan Reynolds to be drafted by the Baltimore

Ravens in the sixth round of the 2016 draft after completing a four-year run with the Midshipmen. But the year after he went pro, the Defense Department rescinded the policy.

Then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, in an April 2017 memo, said that the service academies “exist to develop future officers,” and that graduates would serve as “full-fledged military officers carrying out the normal work and career expectatio­ns” of someone who received an education at the taxpayers’ expense.

Earlier this year, however, Trump said he was considerin­g allowing athletes to get a waiver so they could play pro sports. He made the announceme­nt during a Rose Garden ceremony in May when he presented the Commander in Chief’s Trophy to the football team of the US Military Academy at West Point. The Army Black Knights completed an 11-2 season and earned the trophy for the second consecutiv­e year.

He issued the order in June, saying that athletes graduating from the academies and Reserve Officers’ Training Corps should be able to defer their military service obligation­s due to the “short window of time” they have to “take advantage of their athletic talents during which playing profession­al sports is realistica­lly possible.”

In the new memo, Esper says that military service secretarie­s can nominate an athlete for a waiver after determinin­g there

“is a strong expectatio­n that a Military Service Academy cadet or midshipman’s future profession­al sports employment will provide the DoD with significan­t favorable media exposure likely to enhance national level recruiting or public affairs missions.”

If approved by the defense secretary, the athlete must agree to return to the military and serve their enlistment time, which is usually five years. While in the pro sports job, the athlete’s waiver would be reviewed every year.

If the athletes can’t pass required medical standards when it is time to rejoin the military, then they are “encouraged” to serve in a civilian post within the department for no less than five years, according to Esper’s memo. If they choose not to do that they would be subject to repayment of their school expenses.

It wasn’t clear Thursday what impact Esper’s new policy will have on the fate of Noah Song, a pitcher from the US Naval Academy. Song, 22, was the fourth-round draft pick this year of the Boston Red Sox, so he is not covered by the new memo. The right-hander was going to pitch for the minor league team in Lowell during the summer before reporting for duty to train as a flight officer.

Song is seeking a waiver but there has been no decision yet. The Navy declined to provide any other details.

Several Navy football players have gone on to have success in the National Football League (NFL), most notably 1963 Heisman Trophy winner Roger Staubach, a quarterbac­k for the Midshipmen

from 1962-64. After serving a tour of duty in Vietnam, he joined the Dallas Cowboys in 1969 and guided the team to a pair of Super Bowl victories.

Another Heisman Trophy winner, Glenn Davis of Army in 1946, was a first-round draft pick of the Detroit Lions but had to serve three years in the Army before making his NFL debut with Detroit in 1950.

In addition, receiver Phil McConkey played for Navy from 1975-78, then served for five years before the New York Giants made him a 27-year-old rookie in 1984. He caught a touchdown pass in the Super Bowl for New York and remained in the NFL through 1989.

 ??  ?? AP NAVY quarterbac­k Keenan Reynolds is drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in the sixth round in 2016 after completing a four-year run with the Midshipmen.
AP NAVY quarterbac­k Keenan Reynolds is drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in the sixth round in 2016 after completing a four-year run with the Midshipmen.

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