Fundraiser for Kid's Camp and Vet Charities!

Toledo hosts the USA PATRIOTS...America's No. 1
Amputee Softball Team at Mercy Field, August 28, 2021!


photo/JEFF WALLES

2021 USA Patriots  Page 1Page 2Page 3Page 4Page 5Page 6


The Amazing Story of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team -

"Battle Field to Ball Field!"

By Bob Behre
Diamond Nation, Flemington, NJ
March 24, 2020

      “The reason for being on that field is to re-experience what it means to be a ballplayer long after each had an experience that left him wondering if he would even live, let alone regain former athletic abilities.”
      Steven Clarfield, a clinical psychologist and a softball buff from New Jersey, was in Panama City Beach, Florida taking in the USSSA Military World Softball Tournament when he saw something he never considered a possibility.
      “Nothing in my 55 years on or near a softball field prepared me for what I experienced (that day) in August of 2013,” Dr. Clarfield says, in the introduction to his wonderful book, “Battlefield to Ball Field.”
      Clarfield watched as a full team of amputees competed in a high-level softball game against a team of able-bodied men. This was no exhibition. These teams were competing like every other team in the tournament. Winning was not a wish or a hope. It was their intent.
      “The only way you can insult this team is to not give them your best,” said Clarfield. “Don’t let up until the game is over, because Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball players approach every game like it might be their last and they wish to squeeze every ounce of competitive joy from the experience.”
      That joy for the game is what drew Clarfield to the tournament and a curiosity for what he had heard about the Wounded Warriors Amputee Softball Team brought him to this field in particular.
      “The first thing I had to take into account was my own prejudices of what I thought I was going to see,” said Clarfield. “These guys were the poster boys for anti-entitlement. They were expanding the definition of what is possible.” And Clarfield was quickly expanding his expectations.
      What Clarfield saw that day – besides the diving stabs, double play attempts and a softball crushed 350 feet by a man with two prosthetic legs – was the fruition of a dream embraced by the gifted and gregarious David Van Sleet.
      When Clarfield watched the talented team of Wounded Warriors play so beautifully at a game he held so dear, he knew he had discovered a story that must be told. The trick would be to convince this group of proud and humble military men of his good intentions.

Jay Schramm honored for years
of USA Patriots Fundraising!

photo/JEFF WALLES
SPECIAL RECOGNITION! The USA Patriots Board of Directors, presented Chairman Jay Schramm with a special award in honor of his ten years of leadership, passion and fund raising. The Sylvania Senior Softball League plays a vital role in the success of the USA Patriots fund-raising softball tournament, golf outing and other activities. This year's games, held August 28 at Mercy Field/CYO Park, drew the largest attendance, and was the most successful. The awards dinner was held at Fricker's, Sylvania, Ohio. Alex Teague assists Jay - displaying the giant 2021 game day USA Patriots program cover art. The program was designed by Jerry Keefe.

      “Talking about softball made it easier,” said Clarfield. “We had that in common. I knew people (in the sport) they knew.” Clarfield had begun pitching in men’s fast pitch softball leagues at the age of 15. Two years later he was playing in interstate tournaments and the sport had permanently entered his bloodstream.
      Clarfield had already written two books on softball, “Women’s Fast Pitch Softball: Best of the Best” (2012) and “Ty Stofflet, Softball’s Lefty Legend” (2004).
      “When David read Best of the Best, he found that his experience with the legends of the game mirrored what appeared in the book and he wanted the same kind of approach with (what would become) Battlefield to Ball Field.”
      Though he will never assume credit, it was the meticulously organized and personable Van Sleet who was the catalyst for the Wound Warrior Amputee Softball Team. To paraphrase Clarfield, the WWAST story begins with Van Sleet; a man who saw hundreds of returning injured servicemen and pulled together the resources and the wherewithal to make a difference in everyone’s lives.
      Van Sleet, also the team’s manager, brought in 20 military veterans from around the country in 2010 and the softball team was born. The team gathers on weekends twice a month to play able-bodied softball teams made up of firefighters, military academy cadets, police officers and the FBI.       Every game the Wounded Warriors play is against able-bodied players and the very first game it played, it provided quite an example of the talent – missing limbs be damned – it had assembled. The Wounded Warriors won 35-10. “They were professionals. Professional soldiers. Professional in every way ,” said Bob Duf, chairman and CEO of FedComp, Inc., who helped to set up thegame. “They were each missing a body part, but it was more of an inconvenience than a handicap.”
      With Van Sleet ably steering the wagon, the WWAST soon went national with a feature on HBO Real Sports and a story in Sports Illustrated by Phil Taylor. Critical sponsorship relationships were built with Louisville Slugger and the Washington Nationals.
      “The most powerful thing to me about this story was it was vitally important these players did not leave their athletic lives behind as a result of their injuries and their amputations ,” said Clarfield. “And for all of them – any athlete can understand this – they just wanted to play and they wanted to be part of a team.”
      The throngs of fans who come out to see the Wounded Warriors run on one or two prosthetic legs or pivot on double plays or take hacks with just one arm need to hear the individual stories of near death, physical and psychological trauma, and the long, grueling process of recovery, to truly appreciate how far these men have come.


Josh Wege, #23

      Josh Wege lost both of his legs below the knee and fractured a vertebra in his lower back when his patrol vehicle rolled over a 200-pound improvised explosive device (IED) in Afghanistan. He recalled the emotion of seeing his mother, father, twin brother, three sisters and brother-in-law for the first time at Bethesda Naval Hospital.
      “It was one of the best and one of the most painful memories I’ll ever have,” he said, “because I got reunited and my fight to live was almost over. When I was hurt, all I wanted was to see my family one more time.”
      Clarfield says the arduous process of recovering from such a traumatic injury is equally mental and physical.
      “From a psychological standpoint, this is their identity,” he says. “They’ve become part of a minority. They did not ask for it, but they’ve accepted it. They have a new normal.”
      Wege and his WWAST teammates have a common thread that pulled them through the most difficult months of their recovery, according to Clarfield.
      “It’s a support system,” he said. “Each had someone who shared the brunt of turning things around. It’s a one-to-two-year process.”

      Such are the stories of men who have a remarkable will to return to their athletic prowess.
      “Each of them was previously a genuine athlete,” said Clarfield. “Suddenly the physical part was taken away from them. This would be only a temporary problem.”
      “The Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team’s motto is ‘Life Without a Limb is Limitless,’” said David McGill, an Ossur Americavice president. “At Ossur, ours is ‘Life without Limitations.”