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Navy SEAL, 32, trying to make it as Northwestern walk-on

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It’s not every day that a 32-year-old tries to make it as a walk-on with a Division I football program. But, then again, Tom Hruby isn’t a typical college football player.

Hruby, who is working toward earning a roster spot at Northwestern, is an active Navy SEAL with a wife and three kids.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Hruby is eagerly approaching the challenge of playing alongside athletes roughly a decade younger than him after serving in Navy SEAL operations in areas such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Southeast Asia.

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“I don’t feel like where I’m at today is some outstanding or amazing thing,” Hruby told the Sun-Times. “It’s just more of a challenging route ... the way I kind of think about finding and accepting and trying to take on these challenges that most people would probably say are impossible, one, or very unlikely or just plain dumb.”

A junior at Northwestern, Hruby works as a Navy SEAL instructor at Great Lakes Naval Station near North Chicago, Ill. He lives on campus in the dorms and he visits his family on the weekends.

Hruby became a Navy SEAL in 2006 and joined SEAL Team 1 based in Coronado, Calif. He said several of the friends he made while in the military have died in combat.

“That’s the path you took as a soldier, as a warrior,” Hruby told the Sun-Times. “You just learn to come to terms with that’s what’s going to happen.”

Last year, he made a commitment to improve his education and embarked on his longstanding goal of earning a degree from Northwestern. He was accepted to the university last summer.

Listed at 6-foot-3, 230 pounds, Hruby is trying to make it as a special teams player for Northwestern.

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“I know I couldn’t do it,” Northwestern Coach Fitzgerald told the Chicago Sun-Times. “He’s a man’s man.”

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