 Hello, everybody. Please have a seat. Welcome to the White House. To Coach Ken and the Navy midshipman, I should say welcome back. At this point, you should just add this date to your football schedule every year. Air Force game, Army game, Bowl game, White House visit. We do have some special guests here today that I want to acknowledge. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus is here. You've got Admiral John Richardson. We have Superintendent Ted Carter, Jr. and Athletic Director, Shed Gad-Chuck. Now, Navy football has now won the service academy rivalry 10 of the last 13 years. In that time, they've won 24 of their last 27 games against Air Force and Army. Maybe it's a good thing this trophy just stays in one place so often because it's huge. But I know winning the Commander-in-Chief Trophy means a lot to this team. And it means a lot to me because it shares its name with the most important responsibility that I have. No disrespect to Vince Lombardi or Lord Stanley, but this trophy means a little more to me personally. I am the eighth President to award this trophy. And this is the eighth and final time that I will do it. And what better way than by honoring this historic Navy Academy team. This squad wasn't just the best service academy on the gridiron this year, it was one of the best teams in America. Teams co-captains, Bernie, Sarah, and Keenan Reynolds, had a couple of models that I really like. The first one was 1-0, a reminder to take each game one at a time. So they started the season 1-0 with 38-point blowout. They went 1-0 against Air Force in another route. For the 14th straight year, they went 1-0 against Army to reclaim this trophy, and then Navy went 1-0 in the military bull. All these 1-0s added up to 11 wins, which is more than any Navy team in history. And Navy has been playing football a long time, about as long as we've had the light bulb. For four years, these seniors have won more games than any Navy team since the class of 1909. They've won this trophy three times, won three bowl games, and has anybody here ever lost Army? So it's sort of a deafening silence there. The team's second motto that I like is something Coach Ken would remind his players at halftime. You don't have to do anything special. Just do your job. Just do your job. I really like that slogan. In doing their jobs, these players did something special, and that's especially true for the anchor of this Navy team, Ken and Reynolds, one of college football's all-time greats. Only quarterback in the 125-year history of the Army Navy rivalry to win the game four times. Holds 11 NCAA records, including most Russian yards, by a quarterback. With 88 touchdowns, no one in college football history has been in the end zone more times than Navy's number 19. And in honor of his leadership, both on and off the field, no one will ever wear it again. Which is not bad for a guy who started out as the third-string quarterback. If you ask him which record he's most proud of, Kenan will tell you that it's the team record for wins. Of course, he'd say that. But here's how I know he means it. When Navy played Memphis in Kenan's home state of Tennessee, hundreds of his friends and relatives came out. They wanted to see him break the touchdown record. On Navy's last drive, the Mids were on the one-yard line. Kenan was one score away. Coach called in a QB sneak, but Kenan called an audible and tossed a touchdown to running back Daman Brown. So you knew he meant what he said that what he cared about was the team. Navy also dominated this year thanks to Chris Swain, or the Swain Train, who racked up 1,000 yards, Austin Grebe, who kicked more extra points than any Mids shipment in history, and the calm and quiet wrecking ball at defensive end, Will Anthony, who led the team in sacks. So these players are just as impressive off the field. In February, Meijer Kraw went to Flint to hand out water bottles. Just last week, Myron Troy Thompson visited with junior high students at Washington Jesuit Academy, a first-rate middle school in a low-income community here in D.C. E.K. Benz was a finalist for Academic Heisman. Whiteout Thomas Wilson is First Team Academic All-American. But most importantly, in a few months, 17 of these seniors will be Ensigns, and 15 will be commissioned second lieutenants in the Marine Corps. They'll be joined in their service by another historic group of Mids shipment who are here today. And I wanted to give them a little bit of credit because we, on this day, celebrate football, but we got a lot of extraordinary folks at the Naval Academy, and we are welcoming today the first students ever to graduate with a degree in cyber ops, and their expertise is going to be more critical than ever to our national security. So we're very, very proud of them. We want to congratulate them. Look, the rivalry between our service academies can get heated, but it is healthy and rooted in respect. They learn early on what it takes to be the best. And that's what matters when you're part of the finest fighting force that the world has ever seen. As your Commander-in-Chief, as one of the Americans, you risk your lives to defend. I will continue to do my best to support all the men and women who have the distinction of wearing this nation's uniform. For more than a century, Navy's mascot has been a goat. After what this year's team accomplished, I think you could say that maybe that stands for greatest of all time. So I want to congratulate Navy. Thank you for your service. Good luck getting this thing back to Annapolis. I don't know if you have, like, a big truck bed that you're going to be using. But most importantly, to all of you, I could not be prouder of your commitment and your dedication to this nation, to our security and to our freedom. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. Let's make sure that we get a good picture here. Coach, anything you want to add here? Come on. Thank you. Mr. President, it's always an honor for us to come to the White House. We take great pride in the fact that we've been here pretty much for your entire presidency. Thank you for your service to our country. But for me, the greatest legacy that you'll leave is that of being a father and a husband. Nobody could ever question or argue that this President love and honors his wife and children. And so we thank you for your service to our country. I know there have been a lot of great sports programs that have come here to the White House. But as you said, this team is different. We have 32 seniors behind us that have volunteered to serve you, to serve our country. And we're so grateful for that. But behind you is the greatest senior class in the history of Navy football, and they are ready and willing to serve and to follow you as our Commander-in-Chief and as our head coach. So thank you, Fafa Taitela Lava and Mahalo Nui Law.