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Army quarterback Rollie Stichweh winds up head down and feet up but with the ball tucked securely in his grasp for a score in the 1963 game against Navy.
The 1963 Army Navy Football Game. “I really think there was a palpable sense of relief among everyone when the ball was finally kicked off,” Lynch said. “We’d been through 15 days of mourning.
Army quarterback Rollie Stichweh scored two touchdowns in a matter of a few seconds, at least that’s what many viewers of the 1963 Army-Navy game thought they saw during that December broadcast.
The Army-Navy Game has been held (almost) annually since 1890, and since then, none was more anticipated than the 63rd meeting in 1962. Why the 1962 Army-Navy Game Was the Most-Anticipated Academy ...
The 2024 Army-Navy Game, the 125th game, will be hosted by the nation's capital, Washington, D.C., for just the second time and will kick off at 3 p.m. EST on Saturday, Dec. 14, and be televised ...
Roger Staubach throws an Army-Navy game ball. Legendary former Navy quarterback and 1963 Heisman Trophy winner Roger Staubach recently “inspected” and tested the special footballs that will be ...
1926 – Army 21, Navy 21: The Soldier Field game In front of 110,000 fans, Soldier Field in Chicago was dedicated as a monument to those who served during World War I. It was the best teams in ...
The 1963 Army-Navy game was also the first to use instant replay in a telecast. CBS Director Tony Verna used recorded footage of an Army touchdown run so viewers could see it again. Replay was ...
Four games since 1963. Both Army and Navy have only played each other four times with winning records since 1963. The first was in 1996 when a 9-1 Army team beat an 8-2 Navy team 28-24.
By Rock Westfall Looking back on one of the most meaningful games in the historic Army-Navy game that took place 60 years ago this weekend. On November 22, 1963, President John F Kennedy was ...
Less than two weeks after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, an Army-Navy football game played in front of a crowd ...
8. A 1973 episode of “M*A*S*H” referenced a fictional Army-Navy game that ended 42-36 Navy. To this day, no Army-Navy game has ended with that score. 9. This is only the fifth time since 1963 ...