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Wounded Warriors Tip Off at Basketball Tournament
American Forces Press Service ^
| Ian Graham
Posted on 07/22/2009 10:44:52 PM PDT by SandRat
WASHINGTON, July 22, 2009 Sounds of dribbled basketballs and players shouts filled the Wagner Gym at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here yesterday, but absent were the thuds and squeaks of players running up and down the court.
A member of the National Naval Medical Center team shoots during a wheelchair basketball tournament at Wagner Sports Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C., July 21, 2009. DoD photo by William D. Moss (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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Replacing them at the first City Wheelchair Basketball Tournament were the hissing of hands slowing wheelchairs and the clanging as they collided.
Although the game seemed to trade the normally subtle, hidden tricks of defending a player for aggressive blocking and pushing more akin to hockey or soccer, the players trash-talked and joked as any friends would on the court.
The games didnt require players to be amputees or have injuries that would put them in a wheelchair, but all participants had to play from a chair. In that case, the players who regularly use wheelchairs had an advantage over those who dont.
Its fun to do, Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Justin Knowles, a patient at Walter Reed, said. Some people wont get excited for activities because theyre in their chair. But in this, everybodys in it. Theres no excuse not to do it; theres no reason not to be excited to play ball with your friends.
The tournament, organized by U.S. Paralympics Military Paralympics program, brought in teams from the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md., the National Rehabilitation Hospital here and the Capital Wheelchair Basketball Conference.
The teams came together to show their support and mutual respect, in addition to the chance to compete, said Paralympic coordinator Kari Miller.
We started the Paralympic program here at Walter Reed in October, so its a very young program, she said. We get them participating in different Paralympic sports, so if other organizations invite them to play, they can come into the public eye and showcase their abilities, not their disabilities.
Miller, a silver medal-winning athlete on the U.S. Paralympic sitting volleyball team, said the program ideally will expand to include the full spectrum of Paralympic sports. She said the program isnt necessarily designed to train world-class athletes, but rather to give wounded servicemembers a way to enjoy physical leisure activities, especially when they return to their homes and families.
Whatever level they want to reach, we want to help them get there, she said.
Knowles said he looks forward to expanding the program. Playing basketball has been fun, he said, but hes eager to try different sports and allow his drive for competition to grow.
I cant wait until we start playing more sports. It doesnt matter which ones, he said. I want to try it all.
(Ian Graham works in the Defense Media Activitys emerging media directorate.)
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: basketball; tipoff; tournament; walterreed; wia; woundedwarriors
1
posted on
07/22/2009 10:44:53 PM PDT
by
SandRat
To: SandRat
What are the chances that the moronic pretend-basketball wanna-be Obozo will be there to give them our thanks and support? Probably nil.
2
posted on
07/22/2009 10:49:29 PM PDT
by
hsalaw
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