[Milsurplus] The Army-Navy Game Nobody Missed, 1944
Hue Miller
kargo_cult at msn.com
Sun Dec 11 14:50:08 EST 2011
(from Wall Street Journal, 9 Dec 2011)
I thought this was interesting, anyway.
The original print article included graphics not appearing in the online
edition.
The original game program cover shows a cartoon Army mule and Navy ram (? I
think ? ) in football
uniforms. The mule is holding a BC-611 with a bent-up antenna.
The item about Gene Tunney was news to me.
via: Hue Miller
The Army-Navy Game Nobody Missed
In 1944, No. 1 Army Met No. 2 Navy in a Game for the Ages; Huddled Around
Shortwave Sets .
By RANDY ROBERTS
On the bitterly cold afternoon of Dec. 2, 1944, West Point's Felix "Doc"
Blanchard kicked the football to Annapolis's Bobby Tom Jenkins to begin the
biggest contest in the history of the Army-Navy series.
Sitting in the press box in Baltimore's Municipal Stadium, reporter Al Laney
wrote, "There never has been a sports event, perhaps never an event of any
kind, that received the attention of so many Americans in so many places
around the world."
On that day the world was at war, but for a few hours, for the legions of
American servicemen huddled around shortwave sets in Europe, the
Mediterranean and the Pacific, the hostilities seemed to stop. This was a
game played by boys training to be soldiers and sailors for the benefit of
battle-hardened soldiers and sailors dreaming of being boys once again.
Clockwise from top left: The 1944 Army-Navy game; A program from the game;
Future Heisman Trophy winners Glenn Davis (No. 41) and Doc Blanchard (No.
35) led Army to victory.
This year's Army-Navy game, which takes place Saturday in Landover, Md.,
pits the 4-7 Midshipmen—limping through their worst season in nearly a
decade—against a 3-8 Black Knights squad. Neither team can go to a bowl. The
only intrigue is whether Navy has regressed enough to finally lose to Army
for the first time since 2001.
But in 1944, this rivalry game was not only freighted with the unusual
significance of the time, it was also one of the best and most hotly
anticipated football games of all time. Army was 8-0 and ranked No. 1 in the
country. Navy, at 6-2, was ranked No. 2.
At 2 p.m., with snow flurries in the air and servicemen around the world
listening, the two teams finally met—both for college-football supremacy and
for the greater honor of their schools and services.
The matchup almost didn't happen. Slightly less than three years earlier,
when the Japanese assault on Pearl Harbor plunged the U.S. into World War
II, there were calls from politicians and journalists for Americans to set
aside peacetime frivolities. Pro fessional baseball and college football had
no place in a nation at war, some thought. "You can't train a man to be a
fighter by having him play football and baseball," said Cmdr. James Joseph
"Gene" Tunney, the Navy's director of physical training and boxing's former
heavyweight champion. College football, he said, "has no place in war or
preparing for war."
Others disagreed. Cmdr. Thomas J. Hamilton, the head of the Navy's Prefight
and Physical Training program and a former head coach at Annapolis, thought
football was an ideal way to train men for combat. And since Hamilton had
the ear of the Navy brass, his position carried the day.
Football became an integral part of the Navy's V-5 preflight initiative.
This training program was installed at select college campuses including
Iowa and Georgia. Other larger Navy V-programs followed the V-5's lead. The
mammoth V-12 program, instituted in over 130 colleges just before the 1943
football season to train naval and marine officers, also permitted—and even
encouraged—these candidates to participate in varsity sports.
While the Navy was underwriting the continuation of college football, the
Army moved in the opposite direction. The Army Specialized Training Program
(ASTP), instituted in more than 240 colleges, prohibited cadets from
participating in intercollegiate sports.
These decisions by leaders of the Army and Navy reshaped college football.
Traditions were shed and the prewar pecking order was scrambled. Schools
with Army Specialized Training Program were out of the running as serious
football schools. Most could not field a team and discontinued the sport.
Alabama, Auburn, Stanford and Syracuse didn't field teams in 1943.
Meanwhile, schools with V-12 programs, especially V-12 Marine programs,
walked in tall cotton.
As some football programs declined or folded, V-12 schools like Notre Dame,
Southern California and Purdue snapped up their best players. A player from
Ohio State or Illinois, for instance, could enlist in a Marine V-12 program
in July and find himself playing in the opener for Notre Dame in September
(not surprisingly, the Irish won the 1943 national title).
The burst of football talent at these schools wouldn't last. By late 1943,
the Marines desperately needed junior officers to lead troops onto Pacific
beaches. Football was no longer such a priority and V-12 programs were
tapped for officers. No one was exempt. This point became clear on Nov. 1,
1943: Before the end of the season, the Marines called up Angelo Bertelli,
Notre Dame's All-American quarterback, and shipped him off to Parris Island
to continue his training.
As transient as college football had become, there were two teams left
largely intact: Army and Navy. Although both academies had shortened their
courses of instruction and training to three years from four, Army's cadets
and Navy's midshipmen were not subject to sudden call-ups or shipped
preemptively overseas. They stayed on post until they graduated. And the
leaders at both academies believed that excellence on the gridiron was
important to the war effort. The Army and Navy football teams, thry
believed, should stand as proxies for the two branches of service.
In late 1940, when Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger was appointed superintendent
of the U.S. Military Academy, Army's football team was in a sorry state.
Certain that war was imminent, Eichelberger decided he wanted a team that
would reflect the excellence of the academy and the Army.
As one of his first important acts as superintendent, he landed Earl "Red"
Blaik as head football coach. Blaik had led Dartmouth to a 22-game unbeaten
streak in the 1930s.
As wartime rules tilted college football's balance of power toward the
academies, Blaik had little trouble landing talent. Army quarterback Doug
Kenna, who is now in the College Football Hall of Fame, began his career at
Mississippi—but when his team was gutted by the war, he accepted an
appointment at West Point. Barney Poole, a future Hall of Fame end, also
moved from Ole Miss to West Point, with a pit stop during the 1943 season to
play on North Carolina's V-12 team.
Then there was Army's famous backfield of Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis—a
tandem that's widely regarded as one of the best in the history of the
sport. Blanchard, the fullback who was known as "Mr. Inside," had played his
freshman year at North Carolina and spent time in the Army before ending up
on Blaik's team. Davis, the halfback known as "Mr. Outside" was one of the
few big-name players on the Army team who had gone directly to West Point
from the gridirons of high school.
Davis, Blanchard, Kenna, and Poole weren't so superior as athleted that they
could have been considered ringers, but on this day in 1944, they would
skirt close to the edge of being so.
The game was close for three quarters. Army led 9-7 going into the fourth.
Then came a nine-play, 52-yard Army scoring drive in which Blanchard carried
the ball seven times and accounted for all but four of the team's yards. On
the final play of the drive, he ran over three Navy defenders and bulled his
way into the end zone.
A short time later, Davis put an exclamation point on the game. Finding a
sliver of space, he broke through the Navy line, dodged past several
defenders and outraced everyone else for a euphoric 50-yard touchdown run.
The 23-7 Army victory was Blaik's first in the series.
After the game, the coach received a telegram from the Pacific: "The
greatest of all Army teams—STOP—We have stopped the war to celebrate your
magnificent success."
It was signed MacArthur.
—Excerpted from "A Team for America: The Army-Navy Game That Rallied a
Nation" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
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