By Tim Hipps
U.S. Army Installation Management Command
SAN ANTONIO, Dec. 15, 2014 – Army Staff Sgt. Ronald Bartley
credits military basketball for making him a soldier for life.
The Army's "Soldier for Life" campaign is designed
to ensure that soldiers start strong, serve strong and reintegrate strong so
they remain "Army Strong" when they leave service or retire and
return to their communities.
Bartley already has run youth basketball camps in Colorado
Springs while stationed at Fort Carson, Colorado, and said he intends to coach
throughout the remainder of his military career and beyond.
As a 38-year-old All-Army starting point guard competing
with and against some of America's best military basketball players, Bartley
has more than met the Army's vision of a balanced, healthy, self-confident
soldier whose resilience and total fitness enable him to excel in an era of
high operational tempo and persistent conflict.
Contributing to a Championship
As the oldest player on the team, he helped the All-Army men
strike silver at the 2014 Armed Forces Basketball Championships in November at
Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. He led All-Army with 17 points in
a 103-88 victory over eventual gold medalist All-Air Force, on Nov. 11. Two
days earlier, Bartley tallied 11 points to help All-Army to an 84-71 victory
over bronze medalist All-Navy.
In 2004, Bartley helped All-Army win the Armed Forces
Championship at Charleston Air Force Base, South Carolina. He returned for the
2005 tournament at Camp Pendleton, but was deployed to Camp Liberty in Iraq
throughout 2006 and 2007. He rejoined the All-Army squad for the 2008 Armed
Forces Championships at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, where he was named
to the All-Armed Forces team.
Bartley returned for the 2009 tourney at Naval Support
Activity Mid-South in Millington, Tennessee, and he helped All-Army secure
silver at the 2010 Armed Forces Championship, at Joint Base Myer-Henderson
Hall, Virginia. He missed the 2011 tournament while stationed in South Korea,
but was back on the court for the black and gold at the 2012 Armed Forces
Championships at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland Air Force Base, where All-Army
failed to reach the title tilt. He announced his retirement as a player that
day.
Retirement Announcement That Didn’t Stick
"This is it for me," Bartley said following a
73-67 loss to All-Air Force, which knocked All-Army out of medal contention.
"This is my last year. I'm going to try to get into the coaching ranks.
I'm going to give my spot to the young guys."
Bartley was 36 then, already an aging player clinging to a
young man's game. He sensed that it was time to start giving back. The furthest
thing from his mind was another comeback. He did not, however, have it in his
heart to walk away. The 2013 Armed Forces Championships were cancelled because
of sequestration, but the annual tradition resumed in 2014.
When Bartley, at Fort Gordon, Georgia, learned that longtime
basketball friend Army Capt. Carl Little of Fort Benning, Georgia, was named
head coach of the All-Army team, he was determined to take one more shot at his
elusive second Armed Forces gold medal.
A native of Norfolk, Virginia, Bartley played for Deep Creek
High School in Chesapeake, Virginia. After two years at Allegheny Community
College, he transferred to NCAA Division II Shaw University in Raleigh, North
Carolina, where he played two seasons. He left school without his degree to
play two years professionally in Lisbon for Portugal Telecom in the Portugal B
League.
After getting cut, he joined the Army in 2003. Had he not
discovered All-Army and Armed Forces basketball, Bartley said, he would no
longer be in the military.
"Oh, no," Bartley said. "I wouldn't have been
aiming for 20 [years of service]. I would have done my four, finished getting
my degree, and got out. But because of the basketball, it has allowed me to
stay in."
Beyond the Armed Forces Championships, Bartley has
represented the Army on Conseil International du Sport Militaire, or CISM,
squads at the annual Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe tournament, and
in other international military tournaments. He helped Team USA win the 2008
CISM Basketball Championship at Lackland.
"The whole experience, I would never change it for the
world, anything,” he said. “It's been great."
Basketball Contributed to Army Career Decision
Along the way, Bartley said, he realized how to better move
about the Army system and to better live military life.
"You're networking," he explained. "You're
meeting people in higher ranks, and they're giving you insight on different
things, military experience and things that help, so definitely, basketball has
made me decide to go ahead and do my 20 years."
Bartley and Little played together in the Hampton Roads
Pro-Am League, and later waged on-court battles in South Korea while Bartley
was stationed at U.S. Army Garrison Yongsan and Little, then with the Air
Force, was at Osan Air Base. When Bartley was playing for Shaw University,
Little was playing in the same conference for Virginia State University.
"Once Ron heard I had received the [All-Army] head
coaching job, he said he wanted to give it one more run," Little said.
"I told him what I expected of him. I told him, 'I don't expect you to
carry the load. I'm going to bring weapons around you so you don't have to do
as much. Just bring that veteran leadership.' He was the only one on the team
that has won a gold medal with the Army."
Little also knew exactly how to employ Bartley.
"He's been a point guard all his life -- I knew what he
needed to be done to get the best out of him," said Little, who monitored
Bartley's minutes to around 20 per game. "He had a breakout game against
the Air Force, when we won by 15 points."
From the Court to the Bench
Now that Bartley's run is truly done, Little plans to add
him to his bench as an assistant coach. "He knows what the guys need to be
successful," he said.
Bartley, in turn, believes soldiers need these kinds of
programs.
"I appreciate All-Army Sports from a soldier
aspect," he said. "This right here makes being in the military, being
in the Army, that much better because now you don't just say, 'I'm out here
fighting wars and protecting my country.'"
Bartley said he believes the morale boost makes Army sports
worthwhile. He also points to team-building and esprit de corps at
international competitions as positive aspects of the program when people
question why the military provides sports and entertainment opportunities for
service members and their families.
"I would tell them they need to come and enjoy,"
Bartley said. "Come see what's really going on, instead of just reading
about it or hearing about it. … No budget cuts. We need this. This right here
is what takes us as soldiers to another level. The camaraderie with the other
forces, you can't beat it.
"Without this, I would not be going for my 20,” he
continued. “I would have been out eight years ago. This has been the
best."
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