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Golf gave Army veteran Randy Shack a ‘second life’

Golf gave Army veteran Randy Shack a ‘second life’

VILLAGE OF PINEHURST, N.C. – Randy Shack was never in the first truck. The infantryman always went out in the second Humvee in the gunner’s position. But with his lieutenant already away on R&R, Shack moved up to the front gun, and he didn’t feel good about it.

“It was like the movies,” said Shack, of his 2007 tour in Iraq. “I’m going home the next day.”

Shack, an Army infantryman from Sulphur Springs, Texas, was relieved to have made it through the 12-hour shift without incident. It was time to go back to base, he thought. That is, until word came down that they had one fragmentation mission left to do.

“Oh, this is it,” he thought. “This is it.” 

The Vehicle Born Improvised Explosive Device the Humvee hit confirmed Shack’s worst fears. It was the fifth time he’d been involved in an IED explosion.

“Seven times you don’t have to go out anymore,” said Shack. “It’s like a punch card.”

Several of Shack’s friends reached seven and were diagnosed with traumatic brain injury. While that didn’t happen to Shack, not long after he returned from Iraq, just before his 26th birthday, he found that he could no longer sit up straight. The deterioration came swiftly, and doctors found the spinal cord damage too great to repair.

For years, he scarcely left the house, not wanting to go out in public in a wheelchair. Even to the grocery store.

“After I got out, I spent about 10 years in the bottle,” he said. “I didn’t know what else to do.”

The breaking point for Shack came at home in the garage, when 3-year-old son Raiden opened the fridge and handed his father a beer. He knew the routine.

“Our daughter’s wedding was at the same time,” said Shack. “I don’t remember it.”

He choked up at the memories.

It was the PGA HOPE (Helping Our Patriots Everywhere) program that Shack said gave him a second life. Seven years ago, he sat in his truck for 30 minutes trying to decide if he wanted to get out that first day. That first round, he stayed in his wheelchair and used junior clubs.

Now he’s one of 96 competitors at the inaugural U.S. Adaptive Open, where he’s one of seven players competing in the Seated Player category. Other impairment categories include arm, leg, neurological, vision, multiple limb amputee, short stature and intellectual. Shack, a 12-handicap, opened with a 95 at Pinehurst No. 6 and came off the course still smiling under that thick black beard.

“I can’t even put into words what it…

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