Small Military Contingent Seeks Golden Impact for Team USA in Paris

Small Military Contingent Seeks Golden Impact for Team USA in Paris
Spc. Kamal Bey celebrates after pinning Brazil's Joilson De Brito to win the 77-kilogram gold medal in Greco-Roman wrestling at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, in 2023. (Photo by Maj. Nate Garcia/Army)

This article by Matt Wagner originally appeared on Stripes.com. Stars and Stripes serves the U.S. military community by providing editorially independent news and information around the world.

 

U.S. service members are setting their sights on gold when this summer’s Olympic and Paralympic Games come to France, particularly when it comes to the shooting range.

 

Seven U.S. Army soldiers and at least two veterans qualified for the Olympic Games, held July 26 through Aug. 11 in Paris and other French cities. Another three active-duty soldiers will compete in the Paralympics from Aug. 28 to Sept. 8.

 

The Army Marksmanship Unit based at Fort Moore, Ga, will be sending a sizeable contingent to France. The unit, created in 1956 by President Dwight Eisenhower, has earned 26 Olympic medals so far.

 

One Army veteran of that unit, Vincent Hancock, 35, is competing in his fifth Olympics and will push for his fourth gold medal after winning men’s skeet in Beijing, London and Tokyo.

 

Four current members will test their mettle in a field of 340 across 15 disciplines from July 27 to Aug. 5 at the Chateauroux Shooting Center.

 

Sgts. Ivan Roe and Sagen Maddalena will compete in two events in France.

 

Roe, a Montana native, is making his first Olympics appearance after qualifying in the men’s 10 meter air rifle and 50 meter three-position, or smallbore events.

 

The 28-year-old made All-American seven times at Murray State University and joined the Army Marksmanship Unit in 2019.

 

“Representing the U.S. is – it’s a dream I’ve had since I was a little kid,” Roe said in an Army statement. “So, it’s a culmination of everything I’ve been doing the last two decades. It’s a huge, huge milestone.”

 

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Army Sgt. Sagen Maddalena is one of four current Army Marksmanship Unit members set to compete in Paris. (Army photo)

 

Maddalena hails from Groveland, Calif., and is entering her second Games. She will be looking to make the podium after taking fifth place in the 50 meter small bore in Tokyo. She’s adding the 10 meter air rifle this time around.

 

The 30-year-old walked on at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks and earned eight All-American selections in air rifle and small bore shooting before joining the Army.

 

Along with Roe, two others from the Army Marksmanship Unit will make their Olympic debuts. Staff Sgts. Rachel Tozier, 32, and Will Hinton, 28, qualified in trapshooting.

 

Tozier, a Pattonsburg, Mo., native, joined the Army marksmanship program in 2017 and has earned 11 medals in international competitions.

 

“When I was a senior in high school, I wrote that I wanted to make the Olympic team ... so it’s nice to be able to cross that off,” Tozier said in March.

 

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Army Staff Sgt. Will Hinton earned an Olympic berth in the men's international trap event. (Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Kulani Lakanaria/Army)

 

Hinton, who is from the Atlanta metro area, made a U.S. junior world team in 2013. He switched from sporting clays to international-style trap in 2016 after joining the Army.

 

Keith Sanderson, 49, a Marine Corps and Army veteran, returns for his fourth Games in the 25 meter men’s rapid-fire pistol.

 

Meanwhile, Capt. Sammy Sullivan made the women’s rugby sevens squad for her first Olympic Games.

 

The 26-year-old West Point graduate will play the edge prop position for the Eagles during the tournament, held July 28-30 at the Stade de France in Paris.

 

The women’s rugby team seeks the program’s first medal since the introduction of the sport at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

 

The Eagles took fourth place in world series league stage and beat France, one of the nations in their pool and a medal contender, 19-5 in the semifinals of a tournament in Hong Kong on April 7.

 

“When we really set our minds to it, we can go out and beat these high-level teams,” Sullivan told Stars and Stripes, while naming defending champion New Zealand, 2016 winner Australia and France as the main medal contenders. “That win (against France) in particular solidified in my mind that we can podium at the Olympics.”

 

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Army 1st. Lt. Sammy Sullivan runs upfield during the U.S. Women's Rugby 7s team's gold medal match against Canada on Nov. 4, 2023, in the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile. Sullivan helped the U.S. team win the gold medal. (Photo by Maj. Nate Garcia/Army)

 

Distance runner Staff Sgt. Leonard Korir, 37, is back at the Games after missing out on qualifying for the Tokyo Games by just 3 seconds.

 

The former Iona College athlete took 14th place in the 10-kilometer race in 2016.

 

He placed third in the marathon at the U.S. Olympic trials. His race in Paris will take place Aug. 10.

 

Spc. Kamal Bey is competing in Greco-Roman wrestling in the 77-kilogram weight class. The Colorado Springs, Colo., native received an Olympic quota spot following the vacated berths of Individual Neutral Athletes, or Olympic qualifiers with Russian and Belarussian passports who were deemed eligible and invited to compete in Paris.

 

Bey, 26, will compete Aug. 6-7 at the Champ-de-Mars Arena.

 

Soldiers coaching at the Games are former Olympians Master Sgt. Dennis Bowsher in the modern pentathlon and Sgt. 1st Class Spenser Mango in wrestling.

 

On the Paralympics side, Sgt. 1st Class John Wayne Joss III, 41, and Staff Sgt. Kevin Nguyen, 31, will be shooting in the R6 50-meter rifle prone SH1 event.

 

Sgt. 1st Class Elizabeth Marks, a 33-year-old swimmer, will try to repeat her impressive Tokyo Games haul of three medals — a gold, a silver and a bronze.

 

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