By Shannon Collins
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va., June 24, 2015 – The Marine
Corps wheelchair basketball team defended its title yesterday, defeating the
Navy team for gold, 57-24, in the 2015 DoD Warrior Games wheelchair basketball
finals here.
The journey to the gold began with the seed games on June
20. The Air Force, Army, Navy, Marines, U.S. Special Forces Command and British
forces wheelchair basketball teams first met up to determine who would make it
to the playoffs.
Marines Dominate Early
Air Force had some early wins but the Marine Corps team
dominated early with at least a 20-point spread. The Air Force and Army played
a tight game during the playoffs to jockey for the bronze but the Air Force
took a 19-17 win in the second half.
The Marine and Navy teams had their minds focused on the
gold.
Retired Marine Corps Cpl. Anthony McDaniel, the former team
captain said the team’s best advantage is they have a strong defense.
Good Defense
“They play excellent defense; they’re really aggressive and
they’ve got great stamina so they play at a high pace the whole game so that
helps us out with experience on the court,” he said.
He said another advantage is some of the players also play
on the San Diego Wolfpack wheelchair basketball team so they also bring that
experience to the team.
Retired Marine Corps Sgt. Clayton McDaniel, the team
captain, said the strength of his team came down to “good defense, good
communication and good teamwork.”
Marine Corps head coach Joey Gugliotta said another strength
the Marine team had was that there’s no holes in the lineup.
“We can put five guys in there any time. We can take the
bench and the bench will come in and be ready. What’s good about us is we’re a
strong team from bottom to top,” he said.
Navy Coach Salutes Team’s Performance
The Navy team lost to the Air Force by one point in the
first round of the seeding but beat them in the playoffs by 17 points. Navy
head coach Grant Moorehead said it was going to be a challenge for the Navy
team to take on the Marines but he was already proud of them.
“This is going to be a tough game. The Marines get to play
regularly all the time, and this team’s been together here pretty much at one
camp where we had six days to get ready so they’ve developed really well,” he
said. “They’ve outperformed what I expected; the Marines are strong; they’re
good shooters but I hope they give them a good test today.”
During the first half, the Navy had several shot attempts,
but the Marines were aggressive with the blocking, strong on the rebound and
kept the ball in their court for as long as they could, putting the score at
36-14.
At the half, Gugliotta said the Marine team could pick up
the defense a little bit but that the “guys are working real hard and playing
real well together. These guys came willing to work, and they all want to play
hard. They just need to keep that energy up and the communication up.”
Navy team captain medically retired Navy Chief Petty Officer
Hector Varela said the Marine team was playing a little faster so the Navy team
had to “start playing smarter and thinking ahead of them, trying to outsmart
them.
Varela said he was proud of how his team was playing going
into the second half.
‘Good Energy’
“They have a good energy going, and as long as they keep it
up, they’re playing strong, whatever the board says, as long as they play
strong and 100 percent out there, I’m happy with that,” he said.
As the buzzer sounded, the Marines kicked it into overdrive
and widened the point spread. The Navy continued to push hard until the final
seconds though.
The last two years, the Navy won the bronze medal so this is
the first year they made it into the gold medal round and earned the silver.
‘We Faced a Very Strong Opponent’
“I’m very proud of my team,” Varela said. “We faced a very
strong opponent. They’ve been playing for about four years on average on teams
and most of these guys, this is their first year. They’ve been in the chair for
maybe two months and facing that, I’m very proud. As long as they left
everything they had on the court, they should walk out of here with their heads
held up high because we gave them a good fight. We have heart; we didn’t give
up. We played all 40 minutes of the game, and now we’re silver medalists.”
“We’re thrilled to have made silver,” Moorehead said. “They
really worked hard, got better and played as a team. That’s all I can ask.”
McDaniel said he is proud of his team and that a strong
defense is what sealed the win for them.
“Our defense had a lot to do with how we did today,” he
said. “We communicated a lot better in the second half, and offense was making
our shots. Everything was coming together nicely for us.”
He said what also strengthens the bond of the Marine team is
that the members live by the mentality that Marines “stick together and never
quit on each other. We’ll always be a part of the team, whether we’re here or
somewhere else. When we reunite, it’s almost like we pick up from day one and
that’s a good bond and brotherhood that will never be ever forgotten or
missed.”
As for next year’s Warrior Games, he said the Marine team
plans to “keep coming back hard and strong.”
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