Fisher House Run remembering fallen service members
Transcription
Fisher House Run remembering fallen service members
Section D Couch Potato.............. D3 Golf tip........................D3 SportS Fun run Military Family Month kicks off with fun run-walk D4 T h u r s d a y , N ov e m b e r 5, 2015 www.FortHoodSentinel.com Photos by Kelby Wingert, Sentinel Sports Editor Members of the Fort Hood community walk along the route for Saturday’s Fisher House Hero and Remembrance Run, Walk or Roll at III Corps Headquarters. There were more than 7,000 boots lining the 2.5mile route, each representing a fallen U.S. service member or service dog since 2001. Each boot had a tag with the service members’ name, photo, hometown or military unit and the date they died. Fisher House Run remembering fallen service members BY KELBY WINGERT Sentinel Sports Editor Saturday morning, more than 4,000 runners and walkers lined up before dawn on the pavement near Sadowski Field in front of III Corps and Fort Hood Headquarters for the second annual Fisher House Hero and Remembrance Run, Walk or Roll. Lining the route that the runners would eventually take were nearly 7,200 military uniform boots, each representing a fallen service member or military working dog since 2001. The boots represent those lost in combat, training accidents, suicide and other incidents. The Remembrance Run was started a few years ago by Theresa Johnson, when she was living in Hawaii Members of Team Red, White and Blue, carry the American flag as they walk along the route at III Corps Headquarters’ Sadowski Field Saturday morning. SPORTS BRIEFS NOV. 12 Boot display The boot display from Saturday’s Fisher House Hero and Remembrance Run will stay up in front of III Corps and Fort Hood Headquarters through Veterans Day. Volunteers are needed to help pick up the 7,000 boots. Any volunteers can show up at the display at 7 a.m. Nov. 12 to help with the clean up. NOV. 14 UFC 193 Fort Hood’s Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation will host a watch party for UFC 193 at the Backbone Lounge Nov. 14. Ronda Rousey and Holly Holm will headline the fight night for the World Bantamweight Championship. Joanna Jedrzejczyk and Valerie Letourneau will also fight in the World Strawweight Championship. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. and the event is free and open to all over the age of 18. ONGOING Intramural Volleyball Sign up your unit or battalion intramural volleyball team. The season starts in November. To sign up, contact Mr. Homer Beck at 288-3622. NFL Sunday Ticket The Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation will host the NFL Sunday Ticket watch party each week at the Backbone Lounge, now through Jan. 3. The events are free and open to all, ages 18 and older. and working at the Fisher House at Tripler Army Medical Center while her husband was stationed nearby. Johnson worked for the Fisher House, an organization that provides a “home away from home” for veterans and military Families of patients receiving treatment at military hospitals. There are Fisher Houses on 23 military installations and at 24 Veterans Affairs medical centers across the country. Johnson said she wanted to bring more attention to the Fisher House organization while also doing something to remember fallen military members. “A lot of people run in Hawaii ... so I thought, ‘Let’s do a run but add the uniqueness of putting a name and a face to it,’” she said. The run isn’t timed and there are no winners because “it’s all about the journey,” Johnson said. When Johnson’s husband was relocated to Fort Hood, she introduced the installation to the Remembrance Run in 2014. Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Colt, commanding general of Army Division West, was there Saturday morning to give opening remarks and to run the Boots for fallen military working dogs line the end of the route at the Fisher House Hero and Remembrance Run, Walk or Roll at Fort Hood Saturday on Sadowski Field. The organization added the boots for the dogs this year. route. “I think it’s a terrific celebration of life, really,” he said after finishing the route. Colt has done 16 Arlington Cemetery ceremonies and still keeps in touch with some of the Families of the Soldiers he’s laid to rest and running in this event is another way to keep the memories of those men and women alive. Each year, a pair of bronze boots is passed to the group or organi- zation with the largest number of participants as a trophy. This year, the 1st Medical Brigade team just edged out the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center team in numbers with nearly 200. Many members of the CRDAMC group had just gotten off of work when they arrived for the run, including Sgt. Randall Smith and Spc. Christopher Hill, who work in the See Run, D4 Harker Heights wins at Killeen, hanging onto playoff hopes BY KELBY WINGERT Sentinel Sports Editor The stormy Central Texas forecast last week moved most of the high school football games in the area from Friday night to Thursday night, including the matchup between Killeen and Harker Heights. Instead of Friday night lights, the teams played their game at Leo Buckley Stadium on Oct. 29 – Thursday night lights. As Texas high school football teams entered their final two weeks of games, the Knights and the Kangaroos were fighting for a small chance to make it to the 6A Region II District 12 playoffs this year. A small chance, but still a chance nonetheless. The schools, with a 0-4 and 1-3 district record going into the game, were and still are sitting at the bottom of the district standings. Despite not winning a single district game previously this season, Harker Heights was able to fight off Killeen and win 38-10. Now, both teams are still sitting at the bottom of the standings, each with a district record of 1-4. Harker Heights junior quarterback Daniel Cole said it feels great to finally win a game. “We’ve had a really tough season,” he said. “We’ve come close a lot, in a lot of our games and (this game) really feels good because Coach Edwards has preached to us all week how we’re not out of it, we do still have a chance to make it to the playoffs and no matter what happens, whether there’s a possibility of us going, we’re going to play hard. We’re going to show that Harker Heights is a team to be afraid of.” The Knights had previously lost at Ellison and at Shoemaker by just 3 points. Despite leading 24-3 at halftime, Cole wasn’t going to let the score get to his team’s ego. “I kept preaching all game that it’s still 0-0, we gotta fight like it’s still 0-0,” he said. After the game, Harker Heights head coach Jerry Edwards said he felt great about how his team played. “It sets us up for another opportunity to play again to get into the playoffs next week,” he said. “It’s exciting because we’ve been so close in so many games, it finally feels good to be on the winning side. The Knights will take on the See Football, D5 Photos by Kelby Wingert, Sentinel Sports Editor ABOVE, Killeen quarterback Kenneth Arnold looks to pass the ball during the game against Harker Heights Oct. 29. TOP, Harker Heights quarterback Daniel Cole passes to his receiver during the game against Killeen Oct. 29.
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