A soldier falls two miles through the sky and lands on a black dot the size of a coin, in the exact center of a stadium packed with seventy thousand people. How is that even possible? It starts with a scrap of paper thrown out the door of the plane. This is how the U.S. Army Golden Knights parachute into a packed NFL stadium for the Army-Navy Game — and why it's far harder than it looks. We break down the spot, the backwards math that aims a human being by working out where to land first and where to jump second. We get into the ram-air canopy that flies like a wing, the downwind-base-final landing pattern borrowed straight from aircraft, and the reason a 500-foot stadium bowl is the single nastiest target in the sport, with wind that swirls off the structure into pockets that have no pattern at all. There's a hard 14-knot abort limit, one teammate on the ground with a wind meter and a radio, and a margin so thin a single gust can throw a jumper into the scoreboard. Then we go to the other half of game day: the flyover. At the 2025 Army-Navy Game, the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade put a CH-47 Chinook, two AH-64 Apaches, and a UH-60 Blackhawk over the field on the exact last note of the anthem. We explain how that timing actually works — the pregame scripted to the second, the holding area out of sight, and one liaison on the stadium roof with a handheld radio talking the formation in. Aviators call it Time on Target, and it's the same skill used to put a weapon on a target on command. Two kinds of precision, one afternoon, both built the same way and trained for the same reason. The crowd thinks it's a show. It's a rehearsal. #usa #usarmy #beyondfacts Credits: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fFhzKyC0EU7M4lzQSdirKifLvOaqiGRsMtBp4_-7ePY/preview Join this 'Paper Pilot Club' to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzgWZmqmKpmsr4oPWITusKA/join SUBSCRIBE: https://www.bit.ly/beyondFactsSUB