{"id":40392,"date":"2011-12-20T05:00:50","date_gmt":"2011-12-20T11:00:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=40392"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:22:34","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:22:34","slug":"for-air-forces-torrel-heroic-act-something-anyone-would-have-done","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2011\/12\/20\/for-air-forces-torrel-heroic-act-something-anyone-would-have-done\/","title":{"rendered":"For Air Force’s Torrel, heroic act something ‘anyone would have done’"},"content":{"rendered":"
Air Force’s Mitch Torrel has already shown he’s ready for whatever challenges his military career may hold.<\/p>\n
The sophomore forward stepped up 21 months ago when he alerted and escorted out some of the 150 elderly residents of a Wenatchee, Wash., assisted living complex during a fire that destroyed one apartment and resulted in the deaths of two of their neighbors.<\/p>\n
“Anyone would have done it,” the future combat rescue or special tactics officer from Monticello, Minn., replied when told many consider him a hero.<\/p>\n
Certainly anyone wearing a cadet uniform, coach Frank Serratore said.<\/p>\n
“I’d like to think that I’d do something, you’d do something and so would our players,” Serratore said. “We don’t really know what we’d do until we’re in that situation. I commend him for doing the right thing. It’s typical of the quality of people we have at the Academy.”<\/p>\n
Most people would have called in the fire, as Torrel did, and watched in safety until authorities arrived. But Torrel is not most everyone. He ran into the building, pulled the fire alarm and banged on doors to alert the residents.<\/p>\n
“That’s just how he is,” said Falcons sophomore defenseman Adam McKenzie, also a teammate of his in junior hockey. “He just does what needs to be done on and off the ice, in the classroom or outside it.”<\/p>\n
It also should be no shock that the cadet, who handles most everything in a low-key fashion, was surprised to be honored during an exhibition game in Wenatchee when Air Force played Simon Fraser of British Columbia in early October.<\/p>\n
“The fans at the game are our core group of fans and they were aware of Mitch’s actions,” said Wenatchee Wild president and general manager Bill Stewart. “They all stood and applauded.”<\/p>\n
The Hometown Hero award from the area’s American Red Cross chapter is “the biggest award I’ve ever received,” Torrel said. “Certainly bigger than anything I ever got in hockey.”<\/p>\n