By Karen Parrish
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, June 29, 2015 – The 2015 Department of Defense
Warrior Games concluded with a ceremony yesterday at Butler Stadium, an
open-air venue at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, that serves as parade
ground and athletic arena.
As the hosting service, the Marine Corps choreographed an
event to remember. The Games brought together 250 military athletes -- most of
them previously wounded, ill or injured on duty -- who have retrained their
minds and bodies through adaptive sports.
Saluting the Warrior Spirit
A Marine Corps marching band in red and white, playing brass
instruments and drums, set the pace, stepping complex patterns on the field.
Then the color guard, made up of representatives from the
participating nations and services, paraded their flags, with the United
Kingdom’s “Union Jack” making a brave showing next to the military flags and
the stars and stripes of the United States.
Athletes who had competed in the Games throughout the 10-day
gathering stood or sat at attention facing the flags. After the color guard
cleared the field, dark-jacketed Marines with bayoneted rifles marched onto the
grass, taking up a formation facing the crowd.
The ceremony progressed as the riflemen began a
demonstration of drill and ceremony precision and skill, with rifles spinning
as they were tossed and exchanged through the air. In both facing squad-style
elements and the extended line, the gloved experts never slipped.
The Force Behind the Games
Then the commandant took the field: Marine Corps Gen. Joseph
F. Dunford Jr. approached the podium for his remarks.
“It’s been an absolute honor” to host the games, he said,
before greeting the many senior leaders and spouses in attendance. Dunford said
each of the services placed “exactly the right amount of emphasis on this to
make the Games a success.”
The general then addressed the “very important people: the
athletes, the families, the caregivers and the coaches.”
When the Games opened, he said, he had noted that the
success of the competition would be judged by the quality of their experience.
“This week’s games have truly been about the wounded, the
injured, the ill men and women who have adapted and overcome extraordinary
challenges. … Thanks for inspiring us with your courage, your spirit and your
resilience,” the commandant said.
“I hope you enjoyed the competition, and the camaraderie,”
he continued. “I hope you depart Quantico recommitted to stay in the attack,
and I hope you’ve been reminded that the family represented by the men and
women that are here in uniform tonight are your family forever.”
The general went to detail some of the operational planning
behind the Games. Just over 90 days before the games, he said, a “pickup team”
-- led by Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Juan G. Ayala and including 70 service members
working on logistics alone -- started putting the Warrior Games together.
“This week, we saw heat, rainstorms and other friction that
tested their flexibility, their imagination and, quite frankly, their sense of
humor,” he said. “In every case, they made it happen.”
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