Soccer star doesn't let losing a leg deter her from fullfiling her dreams
When
Bree McMahon was a high school senior, her future was set: She had already
earned a scholarship to play soccer in college.
But
that future changed suddenly one day in 2009, when a close friend accidentally
struck McMahon with a car. Doctors could not save her left leg.
Still,
McMahon was undeterred. She forgave her friend, and immediately asked her
doctor when it might be possible to run again. “I'll admit it, I'm hardheaded,”
the 21-year-old told Jenna Bush Hager in a segment that aired on TODAY Monday,
a follow-up to a report Hager did four years ago. “I knew what I wanted, and I
was gonna chase after it with everything I had.”
And
chase McMahon did. She learned how to walk with a prosthetic — and her first
steps were taken on a soccer field.
Bree McMahon was
fitted with a prosthetic after being struck by a car and losing her leg.
Brevard
College in North Carolina honored McMahon’s scholarship, and she joined the
soccer team, eventually playing as goalie with her prosthetic leg.
“She took this
adversity and she owned it,” said teammate Lindsay Pritchard. “[Playing again]
was her dream from day one. And
she
never gave up on it.”
TODAY
Some thought Bree
would never play soccer again. She proved them wrong.
Not
everyone believed McMahon would compete again. Kathleen McMahon, Bree’s mother,
said that when the family swore she’d return to the field, most people thought
they were “delusional.” But Kathleen never doubted Bree. “Seriously, you don’t
know our daughter,” she said.
McMahon’s
inspirational tale has touched the lives of other amputees.
After
the Boston Marathon bombing in April, McMahon spoke to survivors, including
Roseann Sdoia, who lost her right leg. That conversation moved Sdoia, who
appeared on TODAY and told McMahon, “You're truly an inspiration, and you
really helped me see potential that I have in the future.”
Bree says "you
never know how much you truly appreciate something till it's been taken away
from you."
McMahon’s
experience, her mother said, shows survivors of physical trauma that “recovery
is 99 percent choice and 1 percent chance.”
McMahon
is grateful for every moment she’s earned on the field.
“You
never know how much you truly appreciate something till it's been taken away
from you,” she told TODAY. “And so you just try your hardest to get back what
you've lost, and that's what I do with soccer.”
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