Army Beats Navy 15-0 Behind Tyhier Tyler's 96-Yard Rushing Effort
Dec 12, 2020
Navy quarterback Xavier Arline (7) rushes during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Army on Saturday, Dec. 12, 2020, in West Point, N.Y. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
For the fourth time in five years, the Army Black Knights have defeated the Navy Midshipmen, 15-0, in the annual meeting between the two military programs.
After Navy ended its three-year losing streak to its rival in 2019 with a 31-7 blowout, Army head coach Jeff Monken got his team back on track Saturday to cap off an impressive 8-2 regular season.
The Midshipmen's loss dropped their record to 3-7, marking just their second time having a losing record under head coach Ken Niumatalolo.
Offense was difficult to come by for both teams because of the heavy fog that hovered over the field all day. Tyhier Tyler scored the game's only touchdown in the fourth quarter to help put Army up by 10 points.
The two teams combined for 15 punts, two turnovers on downs, one turnover and a safety.
Army's Defense Solidifies Status Among College Football's Best Units
It's a dangerous combination to put a woeful offense against an elite defense, as Navy found out Saturday.
Army's been a successful program for the past five years, but it's rare that fans and analysts will discuss the team outside of its one high-profile nationally televised game of the year.
It's too bad, because the Black Knights boast one of the best defensive units in the country.
That group entered Saturday ranked fourth in the nation with 289.3 yards allowed per game, eighth in scoring defense with 16.3 points allowed per game and 23rd in run defense with 119.0 yards allowed per game.
Opposing teams have been held under 20 points six times in 10 games, including Navy's zero points on Saturday.
Freshman quarterback Xavier Arline was unable to complete a pass against Army on four attempts. Some of Navy's issues were created by difficult weather conditions, but Army has been bruising its opponents all season.
The offense did just enough to get out with a win. Tyler put the game away early in the fourth quarter with a four-yard touchdown run.
Saturday was another indication that Monken and his staff have done a fantastic job of building the program over the past seven years.
Bad Weather Emphasizes Navy's Offensive Struggles
One of the biggest reasons Navy has struggled this season is because the offense can't sustain drives or put points on the board.
The Midshipmen entered Saturday ranked 131st in scoring offense (18.4 points per game). They scored a total of 13 points in their previous two games against Tulsa and Memphis, and scored seven or fewer points four times in their first nine games.
Arline took over the starting quarterback role prior to last week's game against Tulsa. He was unable to provide a spark in that 19-6 loss with 87 yards of total offense.
Xavier Arline will be the fifth freshman in Navy history to start at QB against Army. The first since 2012. The others went 3-1. #ArmyNavyhttps://t.co/EklRDRWpuh
The weather didn't help matters for Arline or the Navy offense against Army. Foggy conditions made it difficult to see the field for either team, but the Midshipmen seemed especially undone by it. They had five consecutive drives end in a punt to start the game, including four straight three-and-out possessions in the first half.
Navy's best chance to score came at the start of the second half. Arline broke off a 52-yard run to set the offense up with a 1st-and-goal at Army's 2-yard line. The drive ended without any scoring when the Army defense stopped fullback Nelson Smith on 4th-and-goal from the 1.
When Navy has been at its best under Niumatalolo, the offense has always been able to run the ball. They led the nation with 360.5 yards per game on the ground in 2019. That number has fallen to 185.3 yards this season.
Here's how much having a good QB matters to Navy's option.
2019 Malcolm Perry averaged 155 ypg rushing and they went 11-2.
2020 Navy's entire team averages 185 ypg rushing. Currently 3-6.
The entire team is averaging 30 yards more per game than just Perry last year.
Army's defense held the Midshipmen to 108 rushing yards. Their passing offense was nonexistent with only nine yards on nine attempts.
Even on a day when neither offense was able to get much going, Navy's inability to create yards for itself wound up making the difference.
What's Next?
The 2020 season has come to an end for Navy. Army has one more game remaining in the regular season against Air Force on Dec. 19 at 3 p.m. ET.
Gary Steele, 1st Black Army Football Player, Invited to 2020 Army-Navy Game
Dec 11, 2020
An Army cadet signals his classmates on the field ahead of an NCAA college football game between the Army and the Navy, Saturday, Dec. 14, 2019, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Retired U.S. Army Colonel Gary Steele, who became Army's first Black varsity football player in 1966, has been invited to attend the Army-Navy game, per ESPN.com.
Fans are barred from attending the game in West Point, New York because of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, Army athletic director Mike Buddie has made an exception for Steele, though he won't be able to attend.
"It's still hard for all of us to believe that it took until 1966 for the color barrier [on the football team] to be broken at West Point," ESPN anchor Sage Steele, who is Gary Steele's daughter, said.
"He was the first Black varsity player there, and it's amazing because if you look at the team photo from back then, it's pretty easy to spot him. In a sea of his white teammates, he's right there in the middle."
Unfortunately, the 74-year-old Steele won't be at the game, as he is undergoing treatment for cancer in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where he lives.
"He was going to get in his car and drive up to see history at West Point, but my mother had to say, 'Gary, with everything going on, you cannot,'" Sage Steele said.
The ex-tight end caught 66 passes for 1,111 yards and seven touchdowns from 1966-1968. He led the team in receiving in 1968 with a career-high 496 yards and also earned second-team Newspaper Enterprise Association All-America honors. Steele notably snagged eight catches for 156 yards in a 28-24 loss at No. 4 Penn State.
"It's never been about that [being the first Black varsity football player]," Sage Steele said regarding her father. "He just wanted to go and play football and be a great teammate and prepare himself to serve his country. He just happened to be very good at it.
"He's said this a million times and I'll continue to say it, 'Somebody had to be the first. It just happened to be me.' He's very proud. As he has gotten older, he has realized the importance of it."
Army went 23-7 during Steele's era, beating Navy two of three times. The lone loss was a 19-14 defeat in 1967, but Steele scored one of Army's two touchdowns on a 52-yard catch.
West Point Clears Cadets of Making White Supremacist Gesture at Army-Navy Game
Dec 20, 2019
Navy midshipmen march before an NCAA college football game against Army, Saturday, Dec. 14, 2019, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
An investigation conducted by West Point officials has reportedly determined three cadets were involved in a "misplaced joke" rather than a display of white supremacy during ESPN's College GameDay broadcast for the Army-Navy game on Dec. 14.
The cadets could be seen flashing the "OK" hand symbol on multiple occasions during the broadcast:
West Point Clears Cadets of Hate Speech Over 'OK' Symbols at Army Navy Football https://t.co/f5V1ahN3bA
The report concluded the gesture was not made in a racist manner, per TMZ Sports:
"The evidence strongly supports a finding that [the cadets] made 'OK' hand gestures during the ESPN broadcast of GameDay because they were playing the 'circle game' or 'gotcha game.' There is no evidence that [the cadets] hold any racist of white supremacist views or attempted to communicate such messages by using the 'OK' hand gesture on national television."
The three cadets who were involved were questioned during the investigation and denied any malicious intent, saying they were only looking "garner attention from a national audience as well as surrounding cadets" as part of the game.
According to the Anti-Defamation League, the hand gesture became associated with white supremacists around the year 2017. The gesture can be viewed as a hate symbol, as a "W" and "P" (which stands for "White Power") are created by the person's fingers.
This is not the first time a fan making the gesture on television has led to an investigation.
In May, a Chicago Cubs fan wasbannedfrom Wrigley Field after he made the gesture during a live broadcast behind NBC Sports Chicago reporter Doug Glanville.
Army Football Drops 'GFBD' from Motto Because of White Supremacist Origins
Dec 5, 2019
Army football players listen to the West Point Band play the alma mater after winning an NCAA college football game 52-21 against Morgan State, Saturday, Sept. 21, 2019 in West Point, N.Y. (AP Photo/Julius Constantine Motal)
The Army Black Knights football team has dropped its "God Forgives, Brothers Don't" slogan and the accompanying black skull-and-crossbones flag after an internal investigation into the origins of the saying revealed ties to white supremacist gangs.
ESPN's Dan Murphy reported Friday that West Point officials and members of the school's athletic department were alerted of the issue in September, which led the team to stop using the GFBD slogan for the 2019 season.
It's now been removed permanently following the probe.
"It's embarrassing, quite frankly," Lt. Gen. Darryl Williams, the superintendent of the United States Military Academy, told ESPN. "... We take stuff like this very, very seriously. Once I found out about this goofiness, I asked one of our most senior colonels to investigate."
Army traced the origins of its football team using the slogan to the 1990s and made contact with the cadet who helped establish it, but he told investigators he was unaware of the phrase's background, per Murphy. School officials declined to name the former cadet.
Athletic director Mike Buddie told ESPN that head coach Jeff Monken was "mortified" after being alerted of the background information and attempted to use it as a "teaching moment" for his players.
The investigation's final report deemed the team's use of the phrase as "benign," stating there was no evidence there was knowledge of its origins within the program, and it wasn't established to align with the beliefs of "white supremacist groups or any other disreputable organizations," per Murphy.
Army holds a 5-7 record in 2019. The Black Knights finish the campaign Dec. 14 with the annual Army-Navy game. The Midshipmen are 9-2.
Navy alsodropped its sloganfor the 2019 season, "Load the Clip," in August after concerns were raised it was insensitive toward people who've suffered from gun violence. It was replaced by "Win the Day."
'Be a Part of Something Bigger Than Yourself'
Nov 1, 2019
It is two days before the Army Black Knights will silence 107,601 Michigan fans at The Big House and nearly pull off the biggest college football upset of 2019. Army linebacker Amadeo West and cornerback Jaylon McClinton are inside Thayer Hall on the banks of the Hudson River in West Point, New York.
A former horse stable for the U.S. Cavalry, Thayer is now a United States Military Academy academic building frequently compared to Hogwarts thanks to the heavy wooden doors and 1800s gothic architecture. In Room 355, Col. Archie Bates begins his Social Psychology class. The lesson this day? Social cognition, a subtopic of psychology focused on how people process and apply information in social situations.
Bates leads his class of 15 cadets—almost all of whom are West Point athletes—through a thought experiment about how they would handle an increasingly problematic, potentially criminal situation within their battalion. With work piling up and a barrage of incomplete information flying at you, how do you make sound decisions?
"We can handle more than most people," McClinton tells the class, confident that he and his fellow cadets are capable of managing a greater burden than the average civilian.
"That's what you like to think," Bates says. "But have you studied that?"
There's no right answer, nor does it mean the cadets can avoid any damage in real-world applications—a lesson they will soon learn as Army officers. Toward the end of the 75-minute discussion, Bates shares an emotional truth: This "experiment" is based on a series of real events that led to two of Bates' battalion members being discharged and another killing himself after a sexual harassment investigation by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command.
In an era of seemingly endless wars, West, McClinton and the rest of their teammates understand that they haven't just signed up to understand the managerial stresses of one day leading a 40,000-person battalion you can't completely control. They've signed up to serve the country in whatever way the country sees fit. Even in early September, with a massive opportunity to play the University of Michigan just days away, that responsibility is always on the mind. At least during non-football hours.
"It's concerning, for sure," says West, a senior sociology major who hopes to join the Field Artillery Branch after graduation. "I know we're talking about real death and real bullets flying, but it's kind of a similar feeling to football practice. We're doing all this practice just in case we go to war."
A day later, West and his teammates fly to Ann Arbor, Michigan, at 8 a.m. That Friday afternoon, they have a walkthrough at Michigan Stadium. Practice for a much simpler battle, and a chance at making history in one last season before real life, and potentially real war, comes calling.
"I can't wait to run out of that tunnel in front of all those fans," West says, shooing a bee away from his second breakfast—or first lunch—after psychology class. Between football, school and military training, it's tough to keep weight on at West Point. With four NFL draft prospects on the Michigan offensive line, West needs all of the fuel he can get.
"Aside from Navy, this is our biggest game of the year."
For two-and-a-half quarters on Sept. 7, the Black Knights dominated the first Top 10 opponent they had played since they lost to Oklahoma in overtime last season. With Army leading 14-7 at halftime—the vaunted triple-option producing 107 first-half rushing yards to Michigan's 47—the mostly silent Big House booed the Wolverines off the field as they jogged to the locker room. With 10 straight wins entering the weekend, the possibility of Army pulling off an 11th felt real. Until it didn't.
Ultimately, Army wasn't perfect in the second half. After forcing three turnovers in the first half—including two fumbles by Michigan quarterback Shea Patterson—Army gave two back in the second half. Still, Army had its chances. After Michigan tied the game at 14-14 in the third quarter, Army freshman kicker Cole Talley missed his first career field-goal attempt (a 50-yard try) as time expired in the fourth. While Army briefly took a lead in overtime, it couldn't keep pace and wound up losing.
It might have felt like a moral victory to outsiders—Army proved that it can play with anyone—but it didn't feel that way to a Black Knights team that had aspirations of an undefeated season.
Since taking over as Army's head coach in 2014, Jeff Monken has preached ball control, toughness, field position and fundamentals. The strategy has worked. After two early losing seasons, Monken's Army teams won 29 games from 2016 through 2018. But against a program like Michigan, where 5-star recruits dot the roster, Army needed perfect execution to pull off an upset win.
"I don't know if there's a single position on the field where we have a talent advantage over Michigan," Monken says during an interview in his office, overlooking the south end zone at Michie Stadium, days before the game. "But that's not as important to me as having good football players who protect the ball.
"Unless somebody hits you with a sledgehammer—which they're not allowed to do—you don't have to fumble the ball."
Monken learned the triple-option offense as an assistant coach under Paul Johnson at Georgia Southern (1997-2001), Navy (2002-07) and Georgia Tech (2008-09). Johnson retired after 10 years at the helm of Georgia Tech, but not before winning Tech's first ACC championship in more than a decade and spawning a small coaching tree of triple-option devotees like Monken and Navy head coach Ken Niumatalolo.
"That's why Army hired me, because I'm a Paul Johnson guy," Monken says. "This offense has worked everywhere I've been, so we're doing what we need to do to win here."
The reason why the service academies run the triple-option, and why a program like Georgia Southern became a FCS powerhouse under Johnson and Monken, is simple. Without the benefit of top athletes on your offensive line, you have to avoid turnovers and create opportunities for your skill players. In the triple-option, that means rarely throwing the ball (fewer interceptions and sack-fumbles) and using double-team blocks and misdirections to create points of attack for the ball-carrier.
Since hiring Monken, Army leads the nation with an average of 312 rushing yards per game. In a sport where teams that win the rushing battle emerge victorious more than 70 percent of the time, the triple-option is a program-changer.
When Monken took over at Army, he joined with an understanding that the university was committed to upgrading every aspect of a program that had gone 35-84 in the 10 years before his arrival. That meant scheduling games against College Football Playoff contenders like Ohio State (2017), Oklahoma (2018 and 2020) and Michigan. It also meant getting a commitment for the upkeep and modernization of the program's training center as well as a comprehensive nutritional program—Army has a full-service food counter inside the weight room—to help cadet athletes manage the grind of the academy.
According to new athletic director Mike Buddie, Monken has embraced the characteristics of West Point and become a tone-setter on campus. He's even become an early-morning regular—we're talking 5:30 a.m. early—in the Kimsey Athletic Center weight room beneath the football offices.
"We're trying to give these kids the successful student-athlete experience they deserve," Buddie says. "In 10-12 months, they might be in Afghanistan."
"That was the [recruiting] pitch," West says, looking back on why he chose Army as a 17-year-old high school linebacker from California. "Play big-time football and be a part of something bigger than yourself. You could go to Navy or Air Force, but they were already good."
Following the close call at Michigan, Army bounced back with a win over UT-San Antonio in Week 3. However, the Black Knights have struggled since, losing four of their last five.
But the biggest remaining game on their schedule is the last one.
"The first thing people ask you around here is, 'Did you beat Navy?'" Buddie says. "They kicked our butt for [14] straight years."
Army and Navy will meet for the 120th time in Philadelphia on Dec. 14, a clash of cultures that appear similar to outsiders but are noticeably distinct to anyone within the academies.
"There's a very real culture of toughness here," says Monken, noting that every West Point graduate leaves as an officer. "But also an emphasis on supporting. We've got a lot of equipment that you drive and fly and shoot, but nothing more valuable than the personnel. These soldiers are heading into very real life-or-death situations."
As non-uniformed members of the West Point community, Monken and Buddie know that athletics have to work in concert with the rest of the academy to be successful. They're helping to mold young men who will ultimately hold high-ranking positions in the military.
Part of their job is to mentor players who are struggling to decide which military branch to pursue, and visiting with them during the monthlong Cadet Field Training in which the cadets undergo extended field-operations training deep in the wilderness. It also means making sure that football meets the academy's accountability standards.
"Coach Monken has realized that if these kids come up here feeling like this is the easiest part of their day, they're going to want to stay [at the athletics facility] and not go fulfill their duties as soldiers," Buddie says from the sideline at practice as Monken screams at a special teams player for missing his assignment. "Some days are better than others, but he kicks their butts. ... He's the perfect fit for West Point."
Athlete or not, most cadets struggle to adjust to West Point culture early on. Being tough is one thing, but figuring out how to efficiently manage your time and balance the overload of football, school and military responsibilities is another.
In an effort to find the right players, Monken focuses on recruiting selfless, team-first athletes who he believes will embrace the cadet brotherhood.
"Nobody wants to go to a service academy," Monken says. "Certainly some people do, but they're rarely D-1 football players."
Most players at Army are under no illusion of a future in the NFL. But Monken targets overlooked recruits who have played high-level high school football in hotbeds like California, Texas and the South.
At West Point, players that otherwise would have ended up on Division III campuses have the chance to play big-time college football. Once Monken gets a recruit on campus and can show him the program's culture and the benefits of attending one of the top public universities in America with a passionate alumni base, it becomes an easier sell.
Then reality sets in.
To a man, every player on the roster said that, yes, they almost reached a breaking point during Plebe Year. On top of adjusting to life in the barracks, maintaining an unrelentingly rigid schedule and completing all individual responsibilities, first-year cadets—or "plebes"—are required to complete plebe duties. That includes cleaning the barracks, serving food in the mess hall and "calling minutes"—a daily routine when plebes across campus bellow long, loud synchronized blurbs to alert upper-class cadets of the required uniform and time remaining before formation or inspection.
Coupling all of this with the anxiety of meeting West Point's high academic standards and juggling football responsibilities is enough to make a young cadet second-guess his decision.
"It's a very independent experience—some people get it right away, but for some people, it takes longer," Army quarterback Kelvin Hopkins Jr. says.
For the North Carolina native, time management and the ability to separate the three worlds—academics, football and military—took longer than anticipated.
"It started to click halfway through sophomore year," he said. "Separating the lives as much as possible while still learning the playbook."
West, meanwhile, went home for Thanksgiving during Plebe Year and almost never came back.
"The toughest part is going from being the best in high school to the lowest man on the totem pole—in football and the military," he explains.
But after sitting down with his mother, Maria LoMedico, to review transfer options closer to home, West had a change of heart. In so many ways.
"[My mother] told me my options were unacceptable," West laughs, as he speedwalks from his room in the MacArthur Barracks across The Plain to golf class near the West Point tennis courts.
Yes, cadets do get to enjoy classes in the "lifetime sports" like tennis, skiing and golf. With all of their other duties on campus, the few hours spent weekly at golf class, and the more grueling time spent at the football facility, is where these student-athletes find reprieve. They don't have much free time, but at least they can shank some irons and win ballgames like any other college athlete.
"Coming back was the best decision of my life," West says. "But they never go easy on you."
West says that a newfound confidence and pride was evident around the program when he returned. Monken's "control what you can control and never flinch" mantra was producing results, and by Monken's third year at the helm, the program had its first winning season (8-5) since 2010.
"Guys cared more about the little things," West said.
Now a senior, West hasn't had an easy go of it at the academy. After appearing in five games as a freshman, he tore his ACL during fall camp in 2017 and missed his entire sophomore season. He then blew out his right Achilles the following spring.
The cycle of injuries, which kept West sidelined until the final five games last season, presented another brutal hurdle for the linebacker. There's no leniency given to cadets, not even those that are hobbling through formation on crutches.
"No one goes easy on you," West says. "You have to fulfill all the same responsibilities as any other cadet, even when you're drugged up on Percocet."
Now, the winningest senior class in Army history is focused on the end. There are showdowns with Air Force and Navy and trip to Hawaii ahead. After that, of course, are plans with far more serious consequences ahead.
The path to this point hasn't been easy, and it has forced them to confront obstacles no one would relish (even losses to a storied Big Ten program). But that's no reason to look back on what could have been. There's too much to do ahead.
"We really love each other," says senior running back Malik Hancock, "so that helps us get through."
Matt Foley is a writer based in New York. His freelance work has been featured in SLAM, the New York Times, Ozy and theScore. Follow him on Twitter:@mattyfoles.
Donald Trump in Favor of Service Academy Athletes Delaying Active Duty to Go Pro
May 6, 2019
President Donald Trump wants athletes at service academies to have the opportunity to play professional sports before their active-duty service requirements start.
According to Tom Schad of USA Today, Trump said as much Monday while the Army football team was visiting the White House to celebrate its 2018 Commander-in-Chief Trophy win. He called it "a great idea" and suggested it would help Army coach Jeff Monken on the recruiting trail.
However, Schad noted the Pentagon announced it will maintain its policy that requires graduating athletes from military service academies to serve at least two years of active-duty military service.
That Trump came out in favor of allowing service-academy athletes the chance to go pro and delay their active duty is ironic because the current policy was implemented during his presidency.
The Department of Defense instituted a rule under President Barack Obama in 2016 that allowed service-academy athletes to do exactly what Trump advocated for on Monday. However, then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis reversed that policy a mere four months after Trump's inauguration.
Army may not need much help on the recruiting trail after a 2018 campaign that saw it finish 11-2 with a convincing victory over Houston in the Armed Forces Bowl.
It won the Commander-in-Chief Trophy with victories over Air Force and Navy and has won a bowl game three straight years for the first time in program history.