Twins
Face Challenges: War, the NCAA Dance
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Mitch Moore, 23 (CNS
photo by Sarah Hoye)
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By Sarah Hoye
Capital News Service
Thursday, March 27, 2003
ANNAPOLIS - March Madness has taken on a whole new
meaning for the Moore family twins.
Last week, while one was suiting up to play basketball for Butler University
in the NCAA tournament, the other was donning a U.S. Naval Academy uniform
prepping for war.
As the United States launched its "shock and awe" campaign against the
Iraqis, and the tournament got underway, the Moore family's emotions swung
from worry and concern for Mitch and his future deployment, to heart-pounding
excitement for Mike and his team's surprising wins that brought the Bulldogs
to the Sweet 16, where they'll take on University of Oklahoma tonight.
The 23-year-old identical twins from Fairborn, Ohio, spent their first 18
years together, a lot of it on the basketball court. But now, college seniors
far apart, they were never more in each other's thoughts.
Mike was uneasy knowing that Mitch could soon be off to war, and got in touch
quickly when the conflict began.
"I was worried and I questioned him about that - but he'll have at least six
months of training in Quantico," a Marine base in Virginia, he said, almost
reassuring himself.
"What concerns me is his interest in embassy duty. That is scary. He could be
easily overrun. And he would be a prime target with no one watching his
back," he said.
The earliest Mitch could be deployed is January 2004. He said he feels an
"excited anxiousness."
"I think there's apprehension because we know our friends are in harm's way,"
Mitch said. "And we are getting anxious to do our part."
Mitch will graduate as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps in a class of
about 1,000 on May 23.
"This is something that I knew could happen . . . and that's why I'm here,"
he said. "I'm actually looking forward to it. We sat here, we've watched the
military for years, and now we want our turn."
Mitch has wanted to serve his country since seventh grade, when he asked a
teacher what colleges besides Harvard or Yale - which he couldn't afford -
were difficult to get into.
"She told me about the Naval Academy. I did some research and just decided
that I'd come here. And then here I was," he said.
"This was an opportunity I couldn't pass up. It's one of the top educations
in the nation and is consistently ranked as the hardest to get into," he
said, laughing about how he sounded like a talking brochure.
"I've always been drawn to the military. I grew up with it. I realized that
the military was something I wanted to be a part of."
A Military Family
The Moores were raised near Wright Patterson Air Force Base outside Dayton,
Ohio. The boys' grandfather was in the Korean War. They had great-uncles that
flew planes for the Air Force.
Their father, Rick Moore, a civilian engineer at the base, is still a bit
baffled at where his son's military interest came from.
"Hopefully, Mitch wouldn't have to go over there. I'm glad in a way that we
are going there now, than a year from now," said their father, his tone
becoming serious. "But there are a lot of problems that will still need to be
resolved, so he could see some action."
Knowing that there's some lag time between his graduation and full-time
active duty, his mother, Lisa Moore, was slightly more at ease.
"We weren't tremendously worried; we're really just proud of him, and he is
in our prayers," she said. "But I know some of his shipmates will be in
harm's way," she said, becoming quiet. "We don't ask questions."
Even Mike was bitten by the military bug - he is considering the Reserves or
National Guard.
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Mike Moore, 23 (Photo
courtesy Butler University)
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While Mitch's basketball career is over - he was a starting center for the
Navy Midshipmen - Mike's is at its most exciting point.
Butler squeaked by Mississippi State 47-46 in the first round of the NCAA
tournament in Birmingham, Ala.
Rick and Lisa Moore rushed home from the game to get their daughter, Melissa
"Missy," 20, to the airport so she could get back to Cottey College in
Nevada, Mo.
They made it just in time to catch the end of Butler's second-round upset
over the University of Louisville, 79-71.
Their mother nervously paced the house.
"It was so exciting. And it seemed that whenever I was out of the room they
played better," she said in amusement.
It was not just exciting, but historical - the last time Butler made it to
the Sweet 16 was in 1962.
Because the game was not broadcast in Annapolis, Mitch received a
personalized play-by-play.
"I got a call every 10 minutes from my sister and grandmother," he said. "I
was ecstatic. I can't believe they've gotten this far."
Mike sat out his first season at Butler and suffered an ankle injury at the
start of his final season. He's played 64 games since becoming a Bulldog.
"He doesn't see much time, and I'm sure it's frustrating, but he has had some
good times with it," their father said. "We've had a lot of excitement over
the last couple of years."Striking Out
Alone
Mitch and Mike always attended the same schools. They played on the same
sports teams. They even got their driver's licenses on the same day. But when
it came time to enroll in college, they chose to go their separate ways.
"This is the first time we have been away from each other, and we handled it
differently," Mitch said. "I saw it as a chance to grow on my own."
But basketball was always a tradition for the Moore twin towers. At 6-
foot-8-inches and 6-foot-9-inches, they played varsity for three years at
Archbishop Alter High School in Kettering, Ohio. And, they played together
during summer for the Amateur Athletic Union.
But that didn't mean they played nice.
"It's been a love-hate relationship," their father said. "They go through the
exact different things in life. And because they went through the same things
it was a strain on the relationship."
The boys' high school coach, Joe Petrocelli, a retired Army lieutenant
colonel, said they both had a lot of fire.
"They were as competitive as any players I ever had," said the coach who's
been with Alter for 39 years. "If you pitted them against each other you
would have to separate them from keeping them from coming to blows."
Petrocelli said someone told him the other day that the Moore boys almost
came to blows in the school's parking lot over who was going to drive home.
"They were more than feisty . . . neither wanted to give the other the upper
hand," he said.
Despite their personal rivalry, the twins worked hard together for
Petrocelli, and they all stay in touch.
The coach talks to Mitch when Alter's senior class makes its annual trip to
Washington, D.C., and Mike always leaves him tickets at the gate when Butler
comes to town.
"They have that gift. I fully expect them to be very successful. They got
that A-type personality, and they are going to do well," Petrocelli said.
With their college years ending, the twins are planning a two-week trip to
Europe to catch up before Mitch continues his training.
"They grew closer by being apart and they leaned on each other more than they
thought they did," their father said. "I'm glad they separated because they
have grown into their own individuals."
But some things never change.
"I'm five minutes older, and he's two inches taller," Mitch said.
"No, no, he's five minutes older, and I'm one inch taller," Mike retorted.
"And I'm the better looking one."
Copyright ©
2003
University of Maryland
Philip Merrill College of
Journalism
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