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Cheerleaders Pay Visit to Troops
Christina Park and Deryn Derbigny take part in record 66th USO tour.
By Josh Ellis
DallasCowboys.com
July 31, 2008
IRVING, Texas - War is Hell, but occasionally angels visit.
Veteran Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Christina Parker and Deryn Derbigny recently completed the group's record 66th USO tour. Guests of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, they visited military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The cheerleaders joined Adm. Mullen, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, Saints quarterback Drew Brees and Giants defensive end Osi Umenyiora, touching down on Air Force Two in Kuwait earlier this month to begin their seven-day stay. Also on the tour were Milo Ventimiglia of NBC's "Heroes" and Jack Lengyel, former coach of Marshall University and rebuilder of the school's football program following the tragic 1970 plane crash.
The group was able to access remote Forward Operating Bases rarely visited by the USO, greeting troops, signing autographs and lending a grateful ear to America's fighting men and women.
"To see our troops all over the world truly is an honor," Parker, a fifth-year cheerleader, said. "To just be there to see what it is they're doing to keep us safe at home, and knowing what they're sacrificing - USO tours are definitely one of the biggest highlights of being a cheerleader. Being able to give back is the greatest honor."
The trip marked the seventh USO tour for Parker and second for Derbigny, a two-year veteran of America's Sweethearts. Derbigny completed a USO holiday tour in South Korea last winter, while Parker has visited South Korea three times, and Guantanamo Bay and the Middle East twice each.
"The outlook that I have on the United States military is completely different now," Derbigny said. "I have a huge amount of respect for what they do. It's a job that not everybody can do and not everybody is willing to do. With the sacrifices that they make day-in and day-out and being away from their families as long as they are - they work 16 hours a day, everyday - to me the job is amazing."
After three days in Iraq the traveling party moved to Afghanistan to visit, among other bases, FOB Tillman, named in honor of former Arizona Cardinal and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, who was killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan in 2004.
Shortly after the USO group left for home, nine American soldiers were killed in action near a base the tour visited, giving the guests a somber reminder of why they went, and why their hosts fight.
"The difference in going from Iraq to Afghanistan is stark," Derbigny said. "Driving through Kabul, we saw more clearly just how much a reality the war is. Having to ride in a convoy in a Humvee with guards protecting us made me concerned for the first time on this trip. It was my first time going to a war zone. I was anxious and nervous at the same time. I was really excited about going, but also there was the fear of the unknown."
Derbigny and Parker said they were proud to be part of an organization so instrumental in the USO's support of our soldiers.
"Even if they're not Cowboys fans, they're Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders fans," Parker said. "To be able to just bring them an hour of not having to worry about the war, as little as that may seem, it's a huge part of their day. It's something that's a memory they keep with them a very long time."
IN THIS ISSUE OF DALLAS COWBOYS STAR MAGAZINE:
COWBOYS HAVE THE HORSES, BUT KEY QUESTIONS REMAIN
According to those glossy NFL preseason magazines displayed between the video games and the Dr. Phil collection at your friendly neighborhood bookstore, the Cowboys are no worse than co-favorites with the Giants for the NFC East title.
Dallas is also a popular pick to reach the Super Bowl, heights the team hasn't reached since after the 1995 season. Even with a late-season collapse that put a damper on 2007, the Cowboys are coming off a 13-4 year, their best record since 1992, fueling optimism that they can make that long-awaited playoff breakthrough in 2008.
That would represent a dramatic improvement over last year's late stumble when they dropped three of their last four.
With the sweaty business of training camp underway, Dallas is in far better shape than most of its competitors, but there are still 10 issues to be resolved during the Cowboys' stay in California
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Dave Campo didn't have to coach the Cowboys' cornerbacks last season to know depth became a concern. The way teams are spreading out defenses in today's NFL, finding a deep group of effective corners is now a league-wide issue.
"When you play the Packers, you better be ready to play four of them," the Cowboys' new secondary coach says. "You can never have enough of those guys."
Campo, who coached in Dallas as a defensive assistant or head coach for 14 seasons (1989-2002), has no shortage of talented cover men his second time around. It's a nice mix of veterans and rookies, starting with 25th overall pick Mike Jenkins. MORE...
FORMER COWBOYS ANNOUNCER EARNED RESPECT
During a 1989 game at Texas Stadium the crowd roared when the Cowboys' star quarterback scrambled across the sideline to safety.
"And Roger just ran out of bounds!" public address announcer Murphy Martin said in his rich baritone.
The crowd looked toward his booth and roared even louder.
"Oops! I'm sorry," Martin said. "I knew that was Troy."
That night Roger Staubach called the renowned broadcaster at home.
"Murphy, I never ran out of bounds," he told his old friend. "Of course, if I had made the money Troy does, I probably would have."
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