Soldier recovers from traumatic injury in Iraq, participates in Warrior Games

By Sgt. Victor J. AyalaMay 28, 2013

A Soldier's traumatic injury in Iraq to recovery and participation in Warrior Games
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Army veteran Randall McMinn from Linden, Texas, is competing in the cycling, swimming, sitting volleyball and wheelchair basketball events of the 2013 Warrior Games in Colorado Springs, Colo., May 11-16, 2013. More than 200 wounded, ill or injured se... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
A soldier's traumatic injury in Iraq to recovery and participation in Warrior Games
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Army veteran Randall McMinn from Linden, Texas, is competing in the cycling, swimming, sitting volleyball and wheelchair basketball events of the 2013 Warrior Games in Colorado Springs, Colo., May 11-16, 2013. More than 200 wounded, ill or injured se... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Army News Service, May 12, 2013) -- Warrior Games athlete and medically retired Soldier, Randall "Blake" McMinn, remembers that during his Army career, he was taught to leave behind the possibility of failure and the temptation of quitting.

That crucial lesson sticks with McMinn now, nearly seven years after his medical retirement. Today, he continues to live with the limitations imposed upon him by the wounds of war, but is competing again this year in the 2013 Warrior Games in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Despite amputation of his right leg below the knee, a series of painful reconstructive surgeries on his left foot, and constant neck and back pain, McMinn is representing the Army in the games for the third consecutive year. From his traumatic injury in Iraq to his recovery and participation in the games, McMinn never gave up and has no plans to slow down now.

Hailing from Linden, Texas, McMinn's Army career was cut short when an improvised explosive device blast in Iraq crippled the vehicle he was driving and nearly killed him. Immediately after the blast, McMinn put out a fire on the right side of his body and lifted himself out of the vehicle and onto the ground. It was when he tried to move his right leg that he saw just how bad his condition was. After that, he says, the memories run together.

"I remember them giving me morphine and one of the guys giving me a can of Copenhagen saying I'd need it more than he did," said McMinn. "Next thing, I woke up in a hospital bed with the amputation."

McMinn was then returned to the United States, where he underwent therapy and reconstructive surgery at the Center for the Intrepid in Fort Sam Houston, Texas. McMinn says he found himself in a dark place at first. When he left Iraq in December of 2007, he weighed 185 pounds. He weighed roughly 120 a mere two months later.

"It was bad," said McMinn. "But I saw guys with double amputations, and guys missing arms and eyes. They were getting out and staying active. It really inspired me."

McMinn was medically retired in November 2008, and by 2009 had moved to Las Vegas, where he first encountered the adaptive sport of wheelchair basketball.

With the inspiration of fellow wounded warriors fresh in his mind, he started playing for a team called the Silver Bandits and became hooked, he said. He later played for the University of Texas at Arlington and practiced with the Dallas Mavericks. Military veterans on the Mavericks brought the Warrior Games to his attention, and he's been representing the Army ever since.

McMinn credits a large amount of his recovery to the Warrior Games and adaptive sports in particular.

"Attending the Warrior Games in past years has given me an appreciation for being active despite my injuries and has been therapeutic by helping me to connect with those who share similar experiences," he said.

At this year's games from May 11-16, McMinn is competing in the cycling, swimming, sitting volleyball and wheelchair basketball events. He is also looking forward to having his wife and family attend the games to support him.

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