Notre Dame-Navy predictions: Will Irish sink Midshipmen?

Should Notre Dame be on upset alert after coming off such an emotional high from last week?

Notre Dame is back in the nation’s top 25. The Irish checked in 20th in the College Football Playoff rankings and 25th in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll following their beat down of Clemson.

Up next for Notre Dame is the Naval Academy, a team they’ve played every year since 1927 aside from the COVID-adjusted season of 2020.

The Irish have dominated the series and enter Saturday as a significant favorite. Will Notre Dame move to 7-3? And if so, will it be close?

Here is what our staff at Fighting Irish Wire sees happening Saturday.

Draymond Green no es fan de la idea de que haya partidos de basquetbol en un portaaviones (y con toda razón)

Por si no se enteraron, los equipos de basquetbol de Gonzaga y Michigan State se están preparando para jugar un partido en una sede neutral que se jugará en un portaaviones en esta próxima temporada. El partido será en San Diego. El partido está …

Por si no se enteraron, los equipos de basquetbol de Gonzaga y Michigan State se están preparando para jugar un partido en una sede neutral que se jugará en un portaaviones en esta próxima temporada. El partido será en San Diego.

El partido está programado para jugarse en el Veterans Day (11 de noviembre), cuando también será el aniversario No. 11 del 2011 Carrier Classic entre MSU y North Carolina, un juego que ganaron los Tar Heels 67-55. En ese partido pudimos ver a mucho del talento eventual de la NBA, incluyendo a Harrison Barnes, Reggie Bullock and Draymond Green.

Cuando Green se enteró del probable partido de 2022, recurrió a Twitter para expresar lo que piensa.

Traducción: Esto es trágico. Denle a los veteranos un partido adentro de un gimnasio. El basquetbol será mejor y más seguro. Jugar en ese partido fue increíble por el significado, pero el juego fue horrible.

Traducción recuadro: NOTICIAS: Según múltiples fuentes, Gonzaga y Michigan State están en pláticas para jugar un partido en una sede neutral en un portaaviones en San Diego en el Veterans Day (11/11). 

 

A pesar de que nosotros no tenemos experiencia jugando basquetbol en un portaaviones, podemos entender la postura de Green.

Se supone que el basquetbol de alto nivel se juega dentro de un gimnasio; es donde se realizan todos los juegos y las prácticas a lo largo del año y, prácticamente, a lo largo de la vida de los jugadores. Salirse de esa zona de confort podría ser complicado.

No solo eso, sino que también hay que considerar las condiciones físicas, pues adquieren un mayor papel. Es decir, ¡están jugando en un portaaviones! En el partido de 2011, se establecieron planes de contingencia para pasar el partido al hangar principal bajo cubierta por si la lluvia se convertía en un problema. Pero incluso hasta las condiciones de viento y la calidad del aire le podrían agregar un poco de humedad adicional a la cancha, lo que daría pie a consecuencias potenciales innecesarias en el cuerpo de los jugadores.

Traducción: Cuando Michigan State y UNC jugaron al aire libre en la cubierta de un portaaviones de la Marina de E.E.U.U.

 

Hay ocasiones cuando, aunque los recuerdos serían de los más cool que se pudieran llegar a tener, el riesgo de una lesión no vale tanto la pena.

Así que en esta ocasión, estamos de acuerdo con Draymond.

Aun así, su opinión muy probablemente no cambiará nada, mucho menos las nuestras. Así que parece que en noviembre veremos un poco más del basquetbol sobre un portaaviones.

 

Artículo traducido por Ana Lucía Toledo

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Veterans Day: Former Iran hostage works to honor those who died attempting to rescue him

“Freedom does not come free … and we just can’t forget that.”

One day years ago in the early 1990s, when Rocky Sickmann’s daughter was still in grade school, she came home and asked her father to speak to her class.

He asked why. She grabbed her history book that was wrapped tight with a brown Kroger shopping bag, opened it up and said, “Because we’re learning about you.”

The son and brother of men who served in the Army, Sickmann served in the Marines from 1976-1981 and was one of the 65 Americans taken hostage for 444 days during the Iran Hostage Crisis.

After the Marines, Sickmann worked 34 years for Anheuser-Busch before his retirement, where he now oversees the Budweiser account for Folds of Honor, a non-profit organization that provides academic scholarships to the children of wounded or killed soldiers. Since 2007, the group has provided 35,000 scholarships.

Working with Folds, which now has 32 chapters across the country, allows Sickmann to continually aid military dependents and honor the eight soldiers who died in an unsuccessful rescue attempt.

“Along with 65 other Americans our freedom, dignity and pride were stripped on November 4, 1979, and little did I know that I would have to spend the next 444 days in the darkest times of my life,” said Sickmann.

‘Death to America’

For the first 30 days, the hostages’ arms and feet were tied to a chair. The 400 days after that Sickmann was locked in a room with two other Americans. Over that span, the three went outside just seven times for 15 minutes. After a failed rescue attempt, known as Operation Eagle Claw, resulted in the death of eight service members, the hostages were moved from Tehran and sat for four months waiting until the Iran-Iraq War started. They were then brought back to prison for another four months from September through December in 1980.

Sickmann spent two Thanksgivings, two Christmases and his 23rd birthday as a hostage, dreaming of his freedom each and every day.

“It was 1981, January 20, and they came into our room and after 444 days … they take us from our room, blindfolded, take us in, they lead us outside, I walk into something I hadn’t felt for two years, snow through my open-toed shoes,” remembered Sickmann. “They put us in a vehicle, drive about 30 minutes and all of a sudden, we hear the sound of an airplane. This was something you had prayed for, you had hoped for, you had cried for an opportunity just to have the second chance in life.”

“The vehicle stops right behind the airplane, the force of the jet is pushing against the vehicle that we were in, and they tell us to un-blindfold. We only saw a total of five people of the 65 for the 444 days. And here you are looking at people that you had breakfast with on November 4, 1979,” he explained. “And they take us one-by-one to the plane and they’re chanting, ‘Death to America.’ I hadn’t seen a woman in 444 days and a stewardess takes me up and puts me down and you’re freed, and you would think that you would be excited, jumping up and down, but they’re chanting, ‘Death to America’ and you’re boarding this airplane and you just don’t understand what’s going on.”

As a hostage, Sickmann experienced it all: mock executions, blindfolded trips just to use the bathroom, beatings and malnourishment, the tragedies go on. After all that, the captors still had one final trick up their sleeve.

“The plane gets to the end of the runway and they’re getting ready to take off and all of a sudden, the pilot comes on and says they turned the runway lights off. For 444 days, it’s the mind games that were played,” said Sickmann. “They waited 20 minutes until President Carter was out of office, and President Reagan was in, to turn the runway lights on and then taxi down the runway. And it wasn’t until the plane got off the ground and into Turkish airspace that the pilot had told us that we were now freed and we came unglued.”

Homecoming

Sickmann had met a girl before he left the States and told himself he’d marry her if he got the chance when he returned.

“And so I call home to speak to my mom and dad, my dad said, ‘Rocky, Jill’s here. And I said, ‘She waited?’ And he goes, ‘No, she wants to talk to you.’ And I said, ‘Well, that doesn’t sound good.’ She gets on the line and she says, ‘Rocky, you got to make a decision, either me or the military. But I can’t do this.’ I chose wisely,” said Sickmann with a laugh, and 40 years later the two are still together.

“For me, Veterans Day is thinking of those eight individuals that paid the ultimate sacrifice, their life, for my life. I now have three wonderful children, four grandchildren, and I can tell you that those individuals that died that morning of April 25 would never again be able to go fishing with their sons, walk their daughters down the aisle and hold their grandkids, as I have been able to do. I think about all those that have served, and especially those served giving their life for my life, how do you forget something like that?”

Rocky Sickmann
Rocky Sickmann and his family. (Courtesy photo)

Ben Affleck and ‘Argo’

Sickmann and his wife were in Columbus, Ohio, in 2011 at a wedding when the father of the bride called him over and says, ‘Rocky, I want you to meet my sister, she’s a casting director out in LA, you never know maybe someday she’ll be able to help your son,’ who had grown with the dream of becoming a movie star.

“So what’s the chances three days later (the casting director) flies back out to LA, she’s emailing her friend asking her, ‘Hey, what are you working on?’ Her friend comes back and says she’s working with Ben Affleck, George Clooney, John Goodman and a cast of others about a hostage movie on the Iran hostages. And the girl we just met, she goes, ‘That’s interesting. I just met one of the hostages.’”

Just five days later Affleck — the director and star of the movie — had invited Rocky and his son, Spencer, to the set as well as the premier. Spencer was even in the movie briefly as an extra.

A stepping stone

Sickmann has been working with Folds of Honor since he retired in 2016, and the non-profit work as Senior VP of Budweiser accounts has been therapeutic for his downtime. It allows him to not only give back but also stay connected with those he used to work with. If anyone deserves to have his cake and eat it too, it’s someone like Sickmann.

That says, he still has his down moments. Being a hostage for 444 days and having eight people die trying to rescue you is a heavy load to handle and carry, but that’s why Sickmann tells his story every chance he gets. A psychiatrist once told him there are two ways he’d deal with the tragedy: keep it inside, but something’s going to cause you to break and one day talk about it, or use it as a stepping stone.

“Whenever I feel like I’m having a bad day, I think of those eight, and the man upstairs reminds me, ‘Would you rather be here having to catch a 6:30 a.m. flight, or would you rather be over in Iran where you had three rifles to the back of your head?’ ” he said. “If I can go through a mock firing squad, I can go through anything.”

This isn’t a story about golf – though Sickmann is frequently on the course for events and did make his first hole-in-one three years ago at Osage National Golf Resort in Lake of the Ozarks – it’s far more important. No matter where we fall on the political spectrum, we can all agree how important it is to take the time, not only on this one day a year, but to constantly remember and be thankful for those who served.

Said Sickmann: “Freedom does not come free, and these individuals are out there willing to sacrifice their lives and their years and we just can’t forget that.”

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Texans long snapper Jon Weeks gives back on Veterans Day

Veterans Day is special to Houston Texans long snapper Jon Weeks, who makes a point on giving back to the military community.

On Veterans Day, the United States recognizes those who fought for their freedom. For Houston Texans long snapper Jon Weeks, it means more to him; it’s family.

Weeks, who grew up as a military brat, saw his father serve 15 years in the Air Force, remembers his grandfather’s fight in World War II and recognizes his close friend who serves. He — as someone who grew up in both New York and Arizona — understands the importance of the holiday; not just for veterans, but for families like his who made sacrifices.

“Veterans day is so important. Not only are we thanking the men and women who served currently and former,” Weeks told The Texans Wire Monday. “But you got to remember how much the family sacrificed.”

Weeks doesn’t just understand the importance of Veterans Day, he also gives back. Recently, he partnered with Carnival Cruise Line to give U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Joshua Woodard a free cruise out of Galveston. The Woodard’s were also invited to the Texans’ annual Salute to Service game on Nov. 21.

Weeks’ charitable efforts with Carnival goes further than Woodard’s family. The cruise line donated $25,000 to Operation Homefront to help the organization continue its mission of building strong, stable, and secure military families.

Last week, Weeks was given the Texans’ nomination for the NFL and USAA’s Salute to Service Award. He calls the recognition an honor, one that hits close to home.

“I’m truly blessed to even tie myself into what these men and women do for us on a daily basis. It’s a true honor. I don’t think there is enough I can say about how special it is, about how close to me it hits,” said Weeks. “It’s a huge honor and it’s a privilege. I feel very honored that I was selected.”

In his 10 years in Houston, Weeks and his wife, Amanda, have been a staple at almost every military event the Texans have hosted, including the annual Houston Texans Military BBQ, where the two participated in greeting and serving food to attendees.

“The military community is so special,” said Weeks.

Last Thanksgiving, Jon and Amanda volunteered to serve Thanksgiving lunch to over 200 veterans at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston. He will be back in 2019. He calls the opportunity to meet Houston’s military community as an “unbelievable experience.”

“It’s something I’m very passionate about,” said Weeks. “As long as the opportunities to give back are out there, I’m going to give back.”

For Weeks, 2019’s Veterans Day will be spent practicing with his teammates after the Texans’ Week 10 bye. However, he makes sure that he completes his annual tradition: calling his dad, thanking him for his service and his sacrifice to halt his career in order to bring stability to his family.

“Honestly, it’s just a call to my dad, thanking him for what he did, thanking him for his service,” said Weeks on his Veterans Day tradition.

Giving back on Veterans Day does not have to involve a checkbook. Rather, as Weeks states it, it is simply thanking those who served and striking a conversation with them.

“Find your closest veteran possible and just go visit,” said Weeks. “These veterans just love the opportunity to sit down, talk and have a conversation and just talk to people… Find your closest veteran possible and just go hang out with them.

“At the end of the day, I always say I don’t think people thank them enough but, as always, thank you for everything.”