Norwich University Vet Goes From Iraq To Defensive Back
At 25, Sgt. Stiles is a not only a football freshman, but a two-tour veteran of the war in Iraq, a Marine instructor at the nation's oldest military school and an architecture major. He's on his way to becoming a Marine corps officer and trying to make up for the speed he says he's lost since his freshman year of college and his last year of football in 2002.
This article appeared in the Times Argus on Sept. 21. It was written by Pete Hartt.
NORTHFIELD, Vt. - As a first-year starter
in the Norwich football defensive backfield, opposing teams likely
look at Charles Stiles thinking they have an idea of what and who
he is, and what they might do to stop him on the field.
They have no idea.
Whatever they might throw at him, Stiles has been in more
dangerous situations than they can imagine.
At 25, Sgt. Stiles is a not only a football freshman, but a
two-tour veteran of the war in Iraq, a Marine instructor at the
nation's oldest military school and an architecture major. He's on
his way to becoming a Marine corps officer and trying to make up
for the speed he says he's lost since his freshman year of college
and his last year of football in 2002.
"Starting out I was very nervous," Stiles said of his most recent
football career. "I was a little slower; I may have lost a few
steps. But I went out and did what they told me and tried to do the
best I could."
Stiles is far from nervous during an interview in the Hall of Fame
room at Norwich University. It's his birthday and he sits calmly in
camouflage, talking about how he came from Middletown, Pa., to
Northfield via Millersville State University; the Marine Corps;
Paris Island, 29 Palms, Calif.; Okinawa, and Camp Fallujah in Iraq
(twice).
"In Iraq my buddies and I used to joke about coming back and
playing football," Stiles said. "When I knew I was coming to
Norwich I thought I would give it a try, so I talked to my wife.
She was very supportive."
Katie Stiles and her husband have been a couple since high school;
they've been married for two years.
"I talked to him every day on the phone, so that wasn't too nerve
wracking," Katie Stiles said of her husband's time in Iraq. "He
would tell me when he was going to be out of touch for a few days.
I tried not to worry because it was something I couldn't
control.
"I was glad he wanted to get back into football, he loved it so
much in high school."
Stiles enlisted in the Marine Corps after leaving Division II in
Millersville. He left school, he says, because the family needed
help financially and because he needed to gain maturity.
"I went through a period where I had a lot of growing up to do,"
he said. "I wanted to play football, but I felt the service was a
more adult thing to do."
His wife concurs. "He's learned a lot of responsibility, he's
really matured," she said. "You could tell, even on the phone, that
he was learning so much. I always knew he could do great
things."
It's difficult, however, to pull details from Charles Stiles about
his combat service in Iraq.
"(My unit) did a number of things," he said. "It's hard to (talk
about) what it was like, without experiencing it, it's hard to
explain. You can't connect to it without going through it. We lost
five during my first tour, and six during my second. One is too
many."
After basic training at Paris Island and communications school in
California, Stiles was posted to the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion
in Okinawa. His unit was called up to Iraq four months later and
posted to Camp Fallujah in September of 2005. He returned to
Okinawa after his first tour, and then returned to Iraq in April of
2006.
"From the first time to the second, the biggest difference was how
the Iraqi citizens felt about the United States," Stiles said. "The
first time they had been living under so much oppression you would
only see the man of the house out. By the second tour you would see
families out together, and the country was being rebuilt."
Stiles re-enlisted after his first enlistment ran out and, having
won the 3rd Division's Marine of the Year honor in 2006, had a
chance to go to college.
"You apply to the program because you have to have a college
degree to reach a certain rank," Stiles said. "(We chose) Norwich
because I wanted a location without a lot of distractions. My wife
and I wanted to own our own home. I liked the smallness of Norwich
and the personal contact at the school."
With enrollment, a return to the gridiron became possible.
"He called us and his high school coach called us last fall,"
Norwich football coach Sean McIntyre said. "One of our assistants,
Mark Murnyack, had recruited him in high school and we were very
excited. When we met him, and saw him, we were even more
excited."
Stiles commands attention even sitting loosely in a chair, and he
has a palpable sense of calm that makes him a leader even as a
first-year player.
"He's a special type of man," McIntyre said. "For example, when we
go on the road we generally eat at buffets and the coaches go
first, then the seniors and so on, with the freshman last. Even
though he is technically a sophomore, he always goes through the
line with the freshmen.
"Obviously, he's been at war, and third down and one-yard at the
40 is not as tough a situation as he has seen."
No one claims any similarity between the game of football and the
life-or-death business of war. But, Stiles said, "In both cases you
basically have brothers in arms. It's not the same, obviously, but
the basic chemistry of men coming together, not knowing each other,
and having to build trust to work toward a common goal is
similar."
"It's more than a pastime because he loves it so much," Katie
Stiles said. "It's a bonding experience; he's part of a
brotherhood. He really wanted to jump at the chance, and it's nice
that the younger players have taken him in so easily."
http://www.norwichathletics.com/sports/fball/2008-09/news/stiles_09-21-08
