ESPN - Utah State's Levi Williams to apply for Navy SEAL training after bowl
One of those stories I think just needs to be seen by others.
Utah State quarterback Levi Williams will not return for his senior season in 2024, intending to apply for Navy SEAL training following the Aggies' upcoming bowl game.
Williams revealed in a radio interview with a Salt Lake City radio station on Monday he intends to skip his final year of collegiate eligibility with the goal of becoming a SEAL officer in 2025
"I just want to be in a spot where I can protect this great country where we get to play football with the freedom to do that," Williams told KSL 97.5 FM. "I think this is the best country in the world, so I'd like to keep it that way and protect it as long as I can."
The junior quarterback plans to take a SEAL qualifying fitness test after the season. It is a rigorous test that features a 500-yard swim, maximum push-ups, pull-ups, and curl-ups done in separate two-minute intervals, and a 1.5-mile run. The individual time for either the swim or the run cannot exceed 12 ½ minutes.
Williams said he embraces the challenge and is eager to follow in the footsteps of parents and grandparents who served in the military before him. Being a SEAL specifically appeals to him because of the chance to be in a team-oriented environment.
"What I love about their ethos and their motto is that no one guy is better than the other," Williams said. "It takes all of them to complete a mission."
Williams revealed in a radio interview with a Salt Lake City radio station on Monday he intends to skip his final year of collegiate eligibility with the goal of becoming a SEAL officer in 2025
"I just want to be in a spot where I can protect this great country where we get to play football with the freedom to do that," Williams told KSL 97.5 FM. "I think this is the best country in the world, so I'd like to keep it that way and protect it as long as I can."
The junior quarterback plans to take a SEAL qualifying fitness test after the season. It is a rigorous test that features a 500-yard swim, maximum push-ups, pull-ups, and curl-ups done in separate two-minute intervals, and a 1.5-mile run. The individual time for either the swim or the run cannot exceed 12 ½ minutes.
Williams said he embraces the challenge and is eager to follow in the footsteps of parents and grandparents who served in the military before him. Being a SEAL specifically appeals to him because of the chance to be in a team-oriented environment.
"What I love about their ethos and their motto is that no one guy is better than the other," Williams said. "It takes all of them to complete a mission."
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