Posted on 09/13/2006 8:16:58 AM PDT by Incorrigible
|
Rare Recruits: Twin Footballers Interrupt School to Join MarinesBY WAYNE WOOLLEY |
GLASSBORO, N.J. -- It was the first day of spring practice for the Rowan University football team, the unofficial beginning of another promising season for one of America's elite small-college programs.
But first, two of the team's top players, Brad Stys and Scott Stys, had an announcement to make. The identical twins from Milford, N.J., would not be returning this fall for their junior year. They were joining the military.
"Everybody's jaw dropped," Brad Stys said. "It was the last thing anybody expected to hear."
With that announcement, the 20-year-old brothers, both receivers, began the transformation from minor celebrities on the football-crazed southern New Jersey campus to raw recruits who will arrive in October amid the barking drill instructors at Marine Recruit Depot Parris Island in South Carolina.
The decision to enlist midway through college puts the brothers in a distinct minority in the Marine Corps, which gets more than 95 percent of its recruits directly from high school.
And while entire football teams left college to fight in World War II, hardly any of today's players trade gridiron glory for the prospect of war. Pat Tillman, who walked away from a lucrative National Football League contract to join the Army Rangers after 9/11 and then died in a friendly fire incident in Afghanistan, was a notable exception.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association keeps no statistics on how many student-athletes leave school early for military service.
"Most college kids don't give up football to serve their country, simple as that," said Jay Accorsi, Rowan's coach for the past five years.
Then again, Accorsi said, in nearly two decades of coaching, he hasn't come across many college kids like Brad and Scott Stys (whose last name rhymes with "size").
"They just came on real quickly and became leaders on the team," said Accorsi, whose team fell one game short of playing for the Division III national championship the past two years. "They went out of their way to tell me as early as they could about their decision to leave. They said they didn't want to hurt the team."
After Accorsi told his coaching staff that the twins were leaving, one of his assistants remarked: "If you were in a foxhole in the middle of nowhere and you wanted someone to watch your back, wouldn't you want it to be one of the Stys?"
The Stys brothers, who often finish each other's sentences, said the seeds for their decision were planted long before they were born.
Their grandfather, John Stys, was a Marine who fought in the Pacific during World War II. Their father, John Stys Jr., served with the Army's 101st Airborne Division in Vietnam.
Growing up in Milford, a small town on the Delaware River, the brothers showed athletic promise early. Their father steered them to team sports. They picked football, basketball and baseball.
"There's just a lot of parallels to life in team sports, learning things like cooperation," said John Stys Jr., 58, who played the same sports in high school before shipping off to Vietnam.
The twins' older brother, John, 22, was a standout high school football player in his own right and played a year at Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pa. He is now in school part time and considering enlisting in the Marines or the Army.
Although their father, who works as a floor installer, and their mother encouraged their sons to play sports, they say they never pushed military service.
The twins started exploring the option anyway, first considering attending one of the service academies or enlisting after high school graduation. They put those plans aside when college recruiters started calling.
Their two years at Rowan passed in a blur: passes caught, games won and young women impressed. Both were B students.
But they both said they felt something was missing. They had a few long conversations with Alex Shallop, a high school friend who left the Marines last winter after a four-year stint that included a tour in Afghanistan. Shallop described the experience as "a great journey," they said.
When the brothers told their parents they were going to leave school and join the military, their mother's first reaction surprised them.
"What about football?" she asked, reminding them that they haven't missed a football season since first grade.
But they had made up their minds.
"We loved playing football and it wasn't easy to walk away," Brad Stys said. "It just seemed like there's bigger things on the table than school and football. Now just seemed like the right time to do this."
The brothers contacted Sgt. Phillip Whilden, a Marine recruiter stationed in Somerville, N.J. He went to the Styses' home and answered more than two hours of questions. At one point, his boss, Staff Sgt. Trevor Barlow, called Whildren's cell phone.
"These guys going to join?" Barlow asked.
"Boss, they've got a lot of questions," Whilden replied.
About three months later, the brothers signed the contract, opting for the infantry.
Barlow said he had no problem with the twins waiting before signing up.
"You worry about people who rush into decisions like this; they might not be somebody you want on your team," Barlow said. "But these guys, we are really proud to have them as part of our team."
Rain fell sporadically on John Page Field in Glassboro during Rowan's season opener against Christopher Newport University Sept. 2.
Brad and Scott Stys were there, viewing the game from an unfamiliar place -- the stands.
"It's really tough not being out there," said Scott, wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with "Rowan Football" on the front and the team's unofficial motto on the back: "You gotta play this game like somebody just hit your mom with a two-by-four."
As the game went on, other students approached the twins. They all wanted to know when the brothers were leaving and if they were scared.
The answers: Oct. 2 and no.
"We can't wait to go," Brad said at least a half-dozen times.
The game ended with Rowan beating the visitors from Newport News, Va., 32-8. The twins walked out of the stadium and stood near the team's locker room. As the players filed off the field, they saw the Styses and broke into grins.
"Hey, it's the Stys guys," somebody yelled as the players crowded around them, slapping their backs and grabbing their hands.
Later, the twins said they aren't done at Rowan. After serving their four years, they plan to return.
"If they haven't won a national championship by then, hopefully we can come back and help them win it," Brad said. "But they've got enough talent to win it this year."
Scott pondered that statement for a second.
"Then I guess we'll read about it in the paper down at boot camp."
Sept. 12, 2006
(Wayne Woolley is a staff writer for The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J. He can be contacted at wwoolley@starledger.com.)
Not for commercial use. For educational and discussion purposes only.
Watch out Osama! The Jersey Boyz are comin' at ya!
Shame they could not have stuck it out to finish college. The Corps needs good officers as well as grunts.
At any rate, good on 'em.
God Bless them! NJ still has some Patriots left.
Definitely officer material......
There are some officers who started out as enlisted and worked their way through the ranks. In the Navy, they were referred to as "Mustangs". Most Naval officers were, however, college educated.
If you are a college graduate, you are eligble enter the USMC as a Second Lieutenant.
There are a lot of us here in The Garden State.
I know, but try telling that to the rest of the nation. NJ is just the punchline to every joke for them.
A half decade ago, in another war, this would not have been a unique story.
"There are a lot of us here in The Garden State.
I know, but try telling that to the rest of the nation. NJ is just the punchline to every joke for them."
LOL!! Try telling the rest of the nation that we actually have patriots here in San Francisco!! ;>)
WAY TO GO, "STYS GUYS"!!!!!!!!!
ping
You have something against military officers? My husband was a Naval Aviator. He didn't *wet himself*. He served proudly and with great courage.
Jeez lady, lighten up. It's an old Marine Corps joke.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.