
President Donald Trump believes that with a
stroke of the pen -- via an executive order -- he can control the
TV and game scheduling of a college football game in mid-December -- specifically the annual Army-Navy game.
Why? Because that’s what tough guys want -- on and off the field.
The
U.S. already honors soldiers for their service on other days of the year, including the major holidays: Memorial Day (the last Monday in May), Veterans Day (November 11), Armed Forces Day (The third
Saturday in May).
But there are also lesser days:
--Purple Heart Day (August 7) – honoring those wounded or killed in action
--POW/MIA Recognition Day (3rd Friday in September)
– honoring prisoners of war and those missing
--Gold Star Mother’s & Family’s Day (last Sunday in September) – honoring families of the fallen
--Welcome Home
Vietnam Veterans Day (March 29)
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Trump seemingly wants to honor the strength, courage, and other intangibles of those hard-working men.... on the gridiron.
The trouble is, there are
other hard-working athletes who want to show their strength as well -- on the field. They are looking to display their athletic and team-building skills.
For example, on December 13, 2025,
three major games aired on broadcast networks -- the "Cricket Celebration Bowl" and "Bucked Up LA Bowl," both on ABC and the Army-Navy game on CBS.
In addition, there were nine other college
football games played on that day, end-of-the-season Division II and Division III semifinal and quarterfinal games.
Trump wants to end any TV coverage -- regional, local or national -- of
those games within a four-hour period. That will surely mess up the NCAA's end-of-the-season scheduling scheme.
Now let’s go back to the obvious: We don’t know what -- if any --
legal jurisdiction Trump has to do this.
Of course, that never gives him pause. There is always more legal action, lawsuits, counter legal maneuvers to keep the issue going -- mostly
failing.
And even if that doesn’t work, there are continued side benefits: Shifting attention elsewhere from major issues that aren’t popular.
And if this doesn’t
work either, Major League Baseball pre-season starts in less than 30 days. Play ball!