Proudly, Military Amputees Inspire on the Field of Play
Mitch Stacy | January 19, 2012
Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team features a right fielder who is missing his left arm and
shoulder. The team already has 75 games scheduled for this year across the United States. (AP Photo) Related articles
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Plant City, Florida. When a roadside bomb in Afghanistan shredded Marine Lance Cpl. Josh Wege’s legs in 2009, the former high school baseball star wondered if he would even survive, let alone walk, run or play ball again.
But on a recent Saturday, a crowd at a Tampa-area stadium watched him drill a pitch from former US Olympic softballer Jennie Finch over an outfielder’s head and use his prosthetic legs to run out a triple. His Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team crushed an all-star squad that included former pro and college players 23-8.
Wege, 22, plays first base for the barnstorming bunch of Army and Marine combat veterans, most of whom rely on prosthetic limbs. Corporate sponsorships have allowed the team to travel around the country playing local teams for charity, amassing a 14-13 record going into a game on Sunday against a team of first responders in Orange County, California. Their schedule is growing, with 75 games booked for 2012.
All of the infielders are missing at least one of their legs. Two of the outfielders use special carbon-fiber running legs for speed. One outfielder is missing a hand, and the right fielder plays without his left arm and shoulder.
His name is Greg Reynolds, and after most Wounded Warrior losses he challenges the toughest guy on the other team to a push-up contest. He lets opponents use both arms, but the 27-year-old Massachusetts native has only lost once. Seventy is his record.
“There is no better feeling than to get on the field and have people think, ‘You can’t play, you only have one arm,’ ” says Reynolds, a former soldier who survived a harrowing tour of duty in Iraq only to lose his limb in a motorcycle accident back home. “But watch me play. Watch me play. Watch what I do.”
They play slow-pitch softball, but this is not a casual beer league. And the nature of their disabilities doesn’t inspire pity or sympathy — at least not after they start smashing the ball and flying around the bases. Finch’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes team won the other two games last weekend, including a 13-11 squeaker in the rubber match.
At Wounded Warrior games, kids ask for their autographs, women hug them and veterans pump their hands in gratitude.
“The first time we got to see him play with these incredible ballplayers, I couldn’t see the field because I was crying too much,” says Dave Wege, Josh’s father, a Lutheran school principal in Waucousta, Wisconsin. “It was such an emotional thing because at that point we knew that Josh was not only back, he was stronger than before in so many ways.”
Coach David van Sleet, who worked in prosthetics for the military for 30 years, started the team 10 months ago and retired in December to manage it full-time. He got some players from a tryout at the University of Arizona and picked up others along the way, relying on word of mouth at Veterans Affairs hospitals and rehab centers around the country.
The team travels with 11 players who proudly wear around $2 million worth of prosthetic limbs, and no matter the weather they won’t wear long pants. They want fans — particularly those with disabilities — to see they are different, but just as good.
“We got a good bunch of guys,” said 55-year-old Tucson resident Van Sleet, who is not an amputee. “A lot of amputees are depressed, sitting at home, not getting off the couch. We say, ‘Look, you don’t have to do anything at this level, but you need to get up and go do something.’ We try to encourage other amputees to get back into a normal state of life, one way or another. They’ve got to get going.”
Brian Taylor Urruela, 26, is the catcher and one of the players with a curvy running leg. The former soldier from St. Louis lost his right leg below the knee to a roadside bomb in Iraq in October 2006, two days before he was scheduled to finish his tour. The former high school baseball player said it took hundreds of practice swings and other physical therapy to develop his hitting, but he figures he’s nearly as fast on the prosthetic as he was before.
“When you have a disability like this, you have a feeling that you’re never going to be able to do competitive sports again,” Urruela said. “If you look at us, we’re just about as good as any team that plays as much as we do, and we do that with missing limbs. But we were ugly when we first started. It’s just a testament to what kind of rehabilitation this game gives to us.”
Josh Wege, the team’s only double amputee, said he jumped at the chance to play ball again but acknowledged his initial fears that he might not be able to do it at a level that suited him. He got help from his sister, a physical therapist who worked with him to develop his athletic skills.
The morning of the first game against Finch’s team, Wege’s dad tossed batting practice to him. Dave Wege watched his son spray line drives all over the lot, grinning with each “thunk” of the aluminum Louisville Slugger.
“One thing we say as amputees is we’re trying to get back our new normal,” Josh said. “Our limbs aren’t going to grow back any time soon, so this is the normal you’re going to have to get used to. Without this team, my new normal wouldn’t be complete.”
Associated Press
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