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Army Football GBK 2021 Spring Football Thread

There has been and will be plenty to cover and talk about during the course of Army's spring football game. As opposed to multiple threads, feel free to add your comments, feedback, and thoughts regarding Spring Practice 2021 right here on this GBK Spring Football Thread.

By the way, today's (4/3) practice has been canceled. Coach Monken wanted to give the players time with their parents if they had off post privileges.


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Football Recruiting Army prospects participate in this weekend’s Rivals Camp Series in Georgia

GBK Writer Joseph Iacono did a great job with the Army Black Knights “Pipeline” Series #1: Buford High School (Buford, GA) article. In addition to Buford, the Army staff continues to make solid strides in recruiting the entire state, especially OC Brent Davis.

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There are several Army targets who competed and participated in this weekend’s Rival Camp in Atlanta, Georgia, including 2022 commit, Chase Fambro. We will have more on Fambro and others.

Those notables are Griffin Scroggs, who we think we believe is a strong possibility. Then you have Kayne Varner. Another Georgia prospect to keep an eye on is OL, Wyatt Anderson albeit he was not invited to the Rivals Camp.

Opinion: Dave Chappelle perfectly sums up hypocrisy of Colin Kaepernick critics - What Are Your Thoughts?

During Black History Month, with the series 28 Black Stories in 28 days, USA TODAY Sports examines the issues, challenges and opportunities Black athletes and sports officials face after the nation’s reckoning on race in 2020.

If you watched the Capitol riots unfold, and then watched or read the news coverage of them in the weeks that followed, something may have hit you the way it did me. My mind kept flashing to Colin Kaepernick.

One scene in particular was striking. It was news that one of the rioters attacked a police officer with a flag pole that carried the American flag.

The flag pole moment was in many ways definitive proof that all of the objections to Kaepernick's protests were never about the actual protests. It was always about not wanting Kaepernick to bring attention to systemic issues in law enforcement.

His critics just never wanted him to talk race. They just wanted him to shut up and play. Everything else about him hating the police and the flag was just performative art.

It's been over four years since Kaepernick started his protests, and for some, those days may be fuzzy. But to others who followed closely what happened to Kaepernick, we remember exactly how he was portrayed by President Donald Trump and the right wing media ecosystem. Police and the American flag were central aspects to make him seem un-American.

If the arguments against the Kaepernick protests were sincerely about him disrespecting cops or the flag, you would have seen a flood of apologies from the same prominent media voices in the aftermath of the riots. Or at the very least, some type of clarification about why they took such a strong stance against Kaepernick and the juxtaposition of those feelings and statements versus the images from the riots.

So far...crickets.

I could never find the words to fully state all of this, and how I felt, but someone else did: Dave Chappelle.

In a new video released on Friday he spoke in part about Kaepernick.

“Watch the tapes,” Chappelle said, referring to the riots. “Watch that crowd that told Colin Kaepernick he can’t kneel during a football game try to beat a police officer to death with an American flag.”

Yep, that's it. Leave it to Chappelle to say it perfectly.

The good news is Chappelle will be there to put it all in perspective. Like he always does.

Sad, but also very very Amazing

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Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. graduated from West Point despite being "silenced" his entire 4 years there.

No single person spoke to him about anything but professional matters.

He never had a roommate.

He ate by himself.

He graduated in the top 15% of his class anyway, and went on to become the Group Commander of the Tuskegee Airmen, and a 3-star general in the United States Air Force.

Source: "American" by Benjamin O. Davis, Jr.
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