Wounded Warrior Josh Sweeney
- Valor To Victory One Marine's Journey from the Battlefield to the Ice Rink
August 2014 - Duty, Honor, Country. For service members, those three words
define what they ought to be, can be, and will be.
Josh Sweeney, motivated by the events of 9/11, already
understood what service to his country would mean. As an
18-year-old high school graduate, he volunteered to serve
his country in a time of war and enlisted in the U.S. Marine
Corps in 2005 as an infantryman.
The next four years showed Sweeney what true service could
be, and it was a path he was proud to embark on. Then one
day in October everything changed.
As a Marine scout sniper on patrol in Nowzad, Afghanistan,
Josh stepped on an improvised explosive device. He lost both
of his legs, and for two hours he laid on the battlefield
fighting for his life before he was evacuated.
"Before I had fully gone into shock I remember thinking, 'So
this is what it feels to be blown up,'" he said. "I did not
ever think that would be the first thing I would think
about."
Sweeney spent more than a year in rehab at a military
treatment facility in San Antonio. While there, his mother
reintroduced him to the sport he loved. A former able-bodied
high school hockey player, Josh committed himself to learn
the sport from a new perspective: on a sled.
"Every time I went out here and played these short games I
would go back to the hotel and just lay there," he said. "My
shoulders, forearms, and wrists are killing me, my elbows
are screaming at me, but now I don't even think about it."
No longer wearing the familiar digital camouflage of the
U.S. Marine Corps, Sweeney once again is able to represent
his country on an international level. He donned the red,
white, and blue as member of the U.S. Paralympic sled hockey
team in the 2014 Paralympic Winter Games.
In the gold medal game against Russia, Sweeney scored the
winning goal.
"I've done more since I've been injured than I did before.
It's awesome to be able to come back and now I can leave on
my own terms and not have to give up because of an external
force," he said. "This is a true honor and it really feels
like I'm giving back again."
On July 16th, Josh was awarded the Inaugural Pat Tillman
Award for Service during the 2014 ESPYS. The Pat Tillman
Award recognizes an individual with a strong connection to
sports who served in a way that honors Pat Tillman's legacy.
"I was immediately blown away when I heard I received the
award. Growing up in Phoenix I knew who Pat Tillman was, and
what he represented and what kind of person he was leaving
the NFL to join the military," he said.
Now, the Purple Heart recipient has an ESPY award alongside
his Olympic gold medal, and while Josh Sweeney's path has
deviated since his first days as a private in the Marines,
the mission has always stayed the same: Duty, Honor,
Country.
Defense Media Activity video and
story by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Dominique Pineiro
(Other servicemembers involved in the video are listed at
the end of it.)