Home subscribe manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Sports


ED GRANEY: NFL player could serve Army well


Photo by The Associated Press

Cover your ears. Legions of sanctimonious voices are again shrieking over one of two areas that elicit the most moralistic zeal these days:

Why anyone allowed Hannah Montana to pose like that for a national magazine, and the war in Iraq.

Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

Most Popular Stories
  • Books take hit with Colts' win
  • LEFTOVERS: Kimbo exposed as farce
  • Ex-Star tapped as 51s' manager
  • ED GRANEY: Simpson items should hold value -- for life
  • Sanford prepares to juggle Rebels' permissive defense
  • Expert backing Aggies
  • Dawson leaves Tarver speechless
  • TRIATHLETE FINDS NICHE LATE IN LIFE
  • Pollsters showing Cougars little love
  • MOUNTAIN WEST FOOTBALL



  • This particular heat isn't directed at 15-year-old Miley Cyrus for photos of her wearing solely a sheet (blonde wig not included) but instead an Army football player who intends on taking advantage of a new Academy policy.

    It allows a cadet who signs a professional contract that would present opportunities for recruiting and other public-affairs benefits to postpone active service.

    It means this: If Caleb Campbell as a seventh-round draft pick of the Detroit Lions makes the team, he will be allowed to skip the part about tours in Iraq or Afghanistan and instead spend two years as an area recruiter on his off days from football.

    He would be supplying defense as an NFL linebacker rather than as a platoon leader of air artillerymen. He would dodge blocks instead of bullets. If his playing career continues past those two years, he could then buy out the remainder of his active service obligation and agree to six years of Selected Reserve.

    Yeah. OK.

    So?

    Our military is stretched like a piece of taffy. Soldiers continue to be held past their enlistment contracts. The American Chronicle this week quoted Andrew Krepinevich, a retired officer and director of the Center for Strategic Budgetary Assessments, from this Pentagon Report: "The Army has become a thin green line that could snap unless relief comes soon."

    I have no idea if Campbell is good enough to survive an NFL training camp. Army produces pro football players as often as "American Idol" does bad ratings. But he's trying to make the Lions, who most seasons barely qualify as a real team. He at least has a chance.

    If he can secure a place on the roster and turn that success into discovering more willing young men and women to serve so that the Army doesn't annually miss its recruiting goals by miles, why is that a bad way for taxpayers to earn a return on their investment?

    The same goes for Army fullback Mike Viti, who signed a free-agent contract with Buffalo. The same goes for any cadet with such opportunity, be it in sports or entertainment or any high-profiled profession.

    Already, Campbell said deployed soldiers have written supporting his pursuit. A high school player from Texas sent an e-mail saying Campbell's story convinced him to sign with a military academy.

    Do you know the people who seem to have the biggest problem with this? Those who never served a day.

    "Talking with a lot of officers here at the Academy and my coaches, being a football player in the NFL representing the United States Army would be very beneficial," Campbell said. "I really don't want to get into the policy. That's something for someone with a much higher rank on their shoulder than mine to decide.

    "When I came to West Point, I wasn't saying, 'I hope they make a new policy so I don't have to go to Iraq.' I knew what I was getting myself into. I knew I was going to have the opportunity to be a platoon leader and one day leading soldiers into a potential combat situation because I enrolled here during a time of war ...

    "In terms of having a coach not cut me so they wouldn't send me to Iraq, we're talking about the NFL. This is a cutthroat business. I don't think the NFL would have a problem cutting me if that was the case."

    Think about a few things when you hear others tearing down cadets who might take advantage of this policy (which the Navy and Air Force don't offer their athletes) by shamelessly tossing around words such as honor and commitment and loyalty:

    There are other ways to give back than being deployed. Not everyone boards those planes to Iraq. There are bigger pictures to consider, a military of dwindling numbers that desperately needs more than one linebacker or fullback to lessen the pressure on its over-extended troops, particularly if those young men can help recruit countless others.

    Think also of this: After months of NFL headlines being soiled by the likes of Michael Vick and Adam ''Pacman'' Jones and New England's cheating ways, isn't it about time kids begin to hear about a player such as Campbell?

    "It's a win-win situation," he said. "I get to pursue a career because of this new policy, but if football doesn't work out, I get to do what I came to the Academy for. I get to be an officer, and that's something I love as well."

    Nothing wrong with this. Nothing at all.

    Ed Graney's column is published Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. He can be reached at 702-383-4618 or egraney@reviewjournal.com.



    Leave Your Comment 8 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    darion wrote on May 02, 2008 09:52 AM: how to be a football


    Semper Fi wrote on May 01, 2008 03:26 PM: Let's see. I want a great education so I committ to serving my country if we tax payers pay for an education. Then when it is time to serve I get drafted by the NFL and suddenly it is honorable to not finish with my commitment. I have served my country and know first hand how importnat it is to have educated men and women on the front lines. IT SAVES LIVES!!!!!!!


    He is special wrote on May 01, 2008 10:35 AM: Men hate reading about real men!
    There is a little peepee envy going on here.
    How sad.
    Anyone that wants to serve our country is special in my book!


    garrett wrote on May 01, 2008 09:32 AM: I served, and this guy has it right!
    stay out of the army bs as long as you can. NFL vs IRAQ, you have to be kidding me!
    Good choice Cambell!
    I hope you make it!
    onfortunantly, we will still be wasting our time in iq by the time your 2 years are up :( .


    He's Not Special wrote on May 01, 2008 09:28 AM: Nobody else in the military gets to go and pursue their dream of being whatever. Why is this guy special? He signed....he knew what he was doing. Officers from ROTC programs and schools like west point crack me up. They spend four years reading about honor and bravery and duty and they think they know what it is. Put him on the next C-130.


    JD wrote on May 01, 2008 08:51 AM: Well Ed, it's sorta like the missionaries from BYU who are allowed to play after their service, you should have listed that information since you are always including tidbits about your favorite university in Provo, Utah.


    Bill wrote on May 01, 2008 03:55 AM: Who gives a damn for the military's recruiting goals? You admit "our military is stretched like a piece of taffy," yet you are advocating pouring more gasoline on Bush's Iraq fire, the very thing that is causing the problem. If we brought all the troops home now, the recruiting numbers wouldn't be an issue. And thank goodness these young men have a chance to do something more productive than to go over there and die for no reason.


    John Hardina wrote on May 01, 2008 02:28 AM: ESPN and the media have beaten this story to death.........MOVE ON!!!!!!!!!!!!!