Wounded Warriors softball team inspires on and off the field
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Todd Reed, a member of the Wounded Warriors Amputee Softball Team who was a sergeant first class in the U.S. Army during the Gulf War, receives a hug from Nancy Mast, who together with Deb Tipton (right) are volunteers for the Hugs Project of Elkhart, and who greeted the team members during introductions at a charity slow pitch softball game between the Wounded Warriors and Goshen firefighters Saturday afternoon in Shanklin Park. The Hugs Project makes Hugs—- a cooling tie that will keep a serviceperson cool for hours in the blistering heat of the Middle Eastern desert. It is made of sand-colored cotton (for camouflage) and filled with polymer crystals, which absorb moisture and swell when immersed in cold water.
Truth Photo By Mark Shephard

Goshen’s Al Lane, a World War II veteran who served with the Army’s 29th Infantry Division during the invasion of Normandy, chats with Matias Ferreira, a member of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team. Ferreira served with the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines in Afghanistan, where he stepped on a land mine and lost both of his legs below his knees. Lane had just thrown Ferreira the ceremonial first pitch of a charity slow pitch softball game between the Wounded Warriors and Goshen firefighters.
Truth Photo By Mark Shephard



The Wounded Warriors congratulate guest hitter Luke Campbell after his at bat in Shanklin Park in Goshen on Saturday. Campbell’s hit was caught in the infield, but the soon-to-be-15-year-old said he was “really lucky, really happy” for the experience. Campbell and his father, Greg, drove 200 miles from Trenton, Ohio, to see the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team play in Goshen on Saturday.
Truth Photo By Rachel Terlep



Matias Ferreira, a member of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team and a former member of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, signs an autograph for another former marine in Shanklin Park in Goshen on Saturday. Both men thanked each other for their service. Ferreira stepped on a land mine in Afghanistan and lost both of his legs below his knees and now serves as a catcher for the Wounded Warriors.
Truth Photo By Rachel Terlep



Luke Campbell, who turns 15 next week, makes a guest appearance for the Wounded Warriors in Shanklin Park in Goshen on Saturday. Luke was born without a left arm and was given a jersey and invited to a chance at bat for the Warriors. He spent the rest of the game in the dugout talking to the veterans.
Truth Photo By Rachel Terlep



Matt Kinsey, who is a native of Rockville, Indiana, waves to the crowd at Shanklin Park in Goshen, as he and other members of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team are introduced prior to taking the field in a slow pitch softball game against Goshen Firefighters Saturday afternoon. (Truth Photo By Mark Shephard)


He talked to the coach, who nodded, and looked back at his son.
“You’re going to hang out with these guys for a while,” he told Luke, and left him to mingle with the 15 members of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team.
Moments later, the team was embracing Luke like one of their own. And, in a sense, he was.
Like each member of the team, Luke, who turns 15 next week, was missing a limb. Luke was born without his left arm, while the veterans lost arms or legs in overseas combat. Just like the Wounded Warriors, Luke has a passion for the sport and is the pitcher for his travel baseball team back home.
“We saw this (event) online, and (Luke) was interested in coming out here to see how other guys did it,” Greg Campbell said. “He was excited to see other guys play like him.”
The Campbells drove 200 miles from Trenton, Ohio, to see the Wounded Warriors play an exhibition game against the Goshen Fire Department on Saturday afternoon. They play again at 7:30 p.m. today, July 21, at Central High School’s softball complex and will take part in the Elkhart County 4-H Fair Parade on Sunday, followed by a meet and greet at the fairgrounds.
Luke, Greg, the Warriors’ friends and family and hundreds of others from the community gathered around a diamond at Shanklin Park to support both teams.
The Wounded Warriors were greeted by cheers and embraces as women from the HUGS Project of Elkhart gave each member of the team homemade “hugs.” After the game, the team exchanged handshakes with other veterans in attendance and signed autographs for the fans.
Luke watched in awe as the Warriors flew around the field. Players with one arm repeatedly slammed the ball into the outfield. Players with prosthetic legs streaked across the grass to pull down a pop fly. They weren’t just good; they were pretty great.
Midway through the game, the Warriors turned to Luke and asked him if he wanted to bat. Stunned, Luke said yes, slipped on a Wounded Warriors jersey and walked up to home plate.
His swing connected with the ball on the first pitch, though it flew into the mitt of a Goshen firefighter at second base. Luke started heading back to his seat in the bleachers when one of the Wounded Warriors stopped him.
“Where are you going?” the player asked. “You’re part of the team now.”
Luke spent the rest of the game in the dugout, exchanging fielding advice with other one-armed players like himself.
“I was kind of scared,” Luke said of his trip up to bat. “I had never hit a softball before and was kind of nervous. But I hit it.”
At the end of the game, which the Wounded Warriors won 19-0, they all signed a softball for Luke and gave him a silicon camouflage bracelet.
“It says, ‘Life without a limb is limitless,’” Luke read, sporting the bracelet on his wrist.
People like Luke are part of the reason the Wounded Warriors travel the country to play in these exhibition softball games, said team member Kyle Earl of Kalamazoo, Mich.
Earl lost his right hand after he was injured by an improvised explosive device in Iraq in 2006. He said while the team has been a source of therapy after his amputation, he also plays to give people like Luke hope.
“That’s why we do this,” Earl said. “To have guys that are missing a body part come out and to be able to see that it’s not the end. If you work hard enough, you can get out there and play with anybody, anywhere, anytime.
“It’s the greatest feeling in the world knowing that (Luke) wanted to come all the way from Ohio to watch us play because he wanted to see how we do it.”












