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Glenn Stout - Soldier Athletes

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Glenn Stout Soldier Athletes
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Soldier Athletes: summary, description and annotation

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Stories of bravery and self-sacrifice from well known athletes who have served in the military.

-Ted Williams, Boston Red Sox outfielder, whose career was interrupted by service as a pilot during both World War II and Korea, where he saw combat and survived a crash landing.

-Rocky Bleier, Pittsburgh Steelers running back: Drafted in 1968, nearly lost a foot on a land mine during Vietnam War.

-Carlos May, Chicago White Sox outfielder, an emerging star whose fought to remain in the major leagues after a training accident during National Guard service caused him to lose his thumb.

-Pat Tillman, Arizona Cardinals defensive back who turned down a multi-million dollar contract to join the military after 9/11and was later killed in Afghanistan.

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Copyright 2011 by Glenn Stout

All rights reserved. Originally published in the United States by Sandpiper, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2011.

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.

www.hmhco.com

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

Stout, Glenn, 1958
Soldier athletes / by Glenn Stout.
p. cm.(Good sports)

ISBN 978-0-547-41729-5

1. AthletesUnited StatesBiographyJuvenile literature. 2. SoldiersUnited StatesJuvenile literature. 3. United StatesArmed ForcesSportsJuvenile literature. I. Title.

GV697.A1S738 2011
796.0922dc22
[B]
2011002095

eISBN 978-0-547-67731-6
v2.0817

Soldier Athletes - image 1

This book is dedicated to all my young friends and readers from military families who are good sports.

Introduction Athletes sometimes call one another warriors and refer to the - photo 2
Introduction

Athletes sometimes call one another warriors, and refer to the games they play as battles, or wars.

But war and military battles are much more serious than a pickup game of football played in the backyard, a basketball game played in a gymnasium, or a baseball game played in a big stadium in front of thousands of people. War is not a game, and in the military service soldiers use real weapons. Men and women can get hurt and be killed. Peace, not just victory, is always the ultimate goal.

No one really wants to go to war or lose his or her life training for war or fighting in one. But just as athletes recognize that part of being a good sport is realizing that he or she has a job to do and a role to help the team win, soldiers accept a similar responsibility. Like any members of a team, they promise to do their duty for the benefit of others.

The athletes profiled in Soldier Athletes all sacrificed for the larger good. They gave up their playing careerssometimes reluctantly, and at great personal costfor a bigger cause.

Ted Williams
Baseball slugger Ted Williams in the cockpit ready for take off FROM THE - photo 3

Baseball slugger Ted Williams in the cockpit, ready for take off.

FROM THE BATTERS BOX TO THE COCKPIT O N A PRIL 30 1952 some twenty-five - photo 4
FROM THE BATTERS BOX TO THE COCKPIT

O N A PRIL 30, 1952, some twenty-five thousand fans poured into Bostons Fenway Park. Most had come for the same reason: to see slugging outfielder Ted Williams play one final time. The previous January, Williams, who had been trained as a pilot in World War II and remained a member of the Marine reserves, was called back into military service, one of more than one thousand veteran pilots who were recalled into the service to fight in the Korean War. Williams was due to report in just a few days. This would be his last game.

Many fans thought this might be the final game of Williamss career and believed they might never have another chance to see Williams play. One of baseballs greatest hitters, Williams was already thirty-three years old and was expected to serve nearly a year and a half in the Marines. Even if he survived the war, many people thought Ted would retire from baseball after sitting out nearly two full seasons.

From the time he was a kid learning to play baseball on the playgrounds of San Diego, Ted Williams had only one dream. As he once said, When I walk down the street, I want everyone to say, Theres goes the greatest hitter who ever lived. After reaching the major leagues in 1939, Williams had gone a long way toward making that dream come true. Despite missing three seasons while he served in the military during World War II, by 1952 Williams had collected four batting titles and led the league in home runs and runs batted in four times. Ted had played in nine All-Star games, twice been named the most valuable player in the American League, and led the Red Sox to the 1946 AL Pennant and World Series. In 1941, he had hit .406 for the season. Since that time, no other player has ever hit over .400.

Most Boston fans loved Ted, and the crowd arrived early. Before the game, the club held an emotional ceremony for him on the field. Players from both the Red Sox and the Tigers stood together and held hands in a line shaped like a wing that stretched across the field from one dugout to the other. Ted was given a number of gifts, including a book signed by more than four hundred thousand fans sending Ted their best wishes. During the ceremony, Ted stood next to Private Fred Wolfe, a veteran of the Korean War, who was confined to a wheelchair due to injuries he received during his service. At the end of the ceremony, the crowd stood and cheered as Ted turned toward the stands and waved.

Then Williams really gave them something to cheer about. With the score tied 33 in the seventh inning, Williamss teammate and friend Dominic DiMaggio cracked a single. The next hitter made an out, bringing up Ted.

The crowd stood and cheered again. They realized this might be the final at bat of Williamss career.

Ted looked out at pitcher Dizzy Trout and remained focused. He didnt notice the crowd and didnt stop to think that this might be his last at bat. He just concentrated on the pitcher as he wound up, and then watched the ball as it left his hand and hurtled toward the plate.

Williams saw the ball spinning in the air and immediately recognized it as a curve ball. He tracked the pitch with his eyes, and as the ball began to dip over the inside of the plate, Ted began to swing.

He hit the ball on the fat part of his bat with a slight uppercut. A loud crack! ricocheted through the ballpark.

As the ball left the bat in a white blur, the crowd gasped, and then kept cheering. The ball soared high and deep to right field. Tiger outfielder Vic Wertz started to chase after it but saw it was going over his head and pulled up. The ball landed eight rows deep in the stands.

Ted Williams had hit a home run! The fans cheered long and loud as the scoreboard operator showed that Williamss blast had given the Red Sox a 53 lead, and Williamss teammates poured from the dugout and met him at home plate.

When the game ended two innings later, Williams jogged in from left field. The next day he left for Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, to resume his military career. Ted Williams, perhaps the greatest hitter who ever lived, was now Ted Williams, marine pilot.

On December 7 1942 the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in Hawaii an event that - photo 5

On December 7, 1942, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, an event that marked the beginning of World War II for the United States. At the time, Ted Williams had just completed his third season in the major leagues. American men at the time were subject to the draft, a law that required most to serve in the military if asked. Since Ted financially supported his mother, he was not yet subjected to the draft. But by the beginning of the 1942 season it was beginning to look as if Williams, like most other healthy young men, might be drafted anyway. As he thought about serving in the military, he became intrigued with the idea of learning how to fly. So instead of waiting to get drafted, Williams enlisted in the reserves, becoming a part-time soldier. He spent the rest of the 1942 season hitting home runs by day and studying flight manuals by night. That November he reported to ground school to learn to fly.

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