Brotherhood When West Point Rugby went to war

Martin Pengelly

Book - 2023

"Six months after 9/11, U.S. troops were on the ground in Afghanistan; less than a year later, America invaded Iraq. Brotherhood follows players on West Point's fiercely passionate rugby team as they became members of the first class to graduate in wartime since the days of Vietnam. Longtime journalist and Guardian editor Martin Pengelly's moving story covers a remarkable decades-long arc from 9/11 to present day. The narrative is guided by team captain, Matt Blind, as well as Bryan Phillips, an enormous football lineman who found a new life in the heart of the rugby scrum, and coach Mike Mahan, a legend of Army sports. Brotherhood offers intimate portraits of young men who go to war and what it meant to them to be bonded fir...st by their time on the sports field. Of the rugby-playing teammates in West Point's class of 2002 who went to war, some came home and others didn't. Capt. Jimmy Gurbisz, one of the team's forwards, came from blue-collar New Jersey, achieved his dream by entering West Point, discovered a new sport there, fell in love with it, excelled, but suffered an injury which led directly to his tragic death in a blast of flame and steel on a dusty Baghdad street. Team players Zac Miller and Joey Emigh died away from war, but no less tragically. This book captures banding together on the rugby field with the same men whose lives they'll have to fiercely protect on the battlefield. Given extraordinary access, Pengelly has created a singular blend of brutal sports and even more brutal war that reads like Friday Nights Lights meets Band of Brothers"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Boston : Godine 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Martin Pengelly (author)
Other Authors
H. R. McMaster, 1962- (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xxiv, 355 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781567927115
9781567927122
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • The team: West Point rugby 2002
  • Shitsucker
  • Aldershot
  • Point
  • Eatontown
  • Beast
  • Stoneboro
  • Rugby
  • Fullerton
  • Play
  • September
  • Brothers
  • Finals
  • Ranger
  • Conroe
  • Benning
  • War
  • Baghdad
  • Rustamiyah
  • Convoy
  • After
  • Arlington
  • Clint
  • Glossary of rugby terms
  • Illustrations
  • Source notes
  • Selected bibliography
  • Acknowledgments.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Pengelly debuts with an intimate portrait of the members of the West Point Military Academy's rugby team of 2001--2002--the first academic year following the September 11 attacks, whose graduating class entered a military at war. In the U.S., rugby is found mostly on college campuses and "very few arrive at rugby in a straight line," according to Pengelly: "At West Point, the rugby team were proud outsiders, cut from football, drifted over from lacrosse, wrestling, or track." In one of the oldest academic institutions in the country, where cadets are taught to live by the motto "duty, honor, country," rugby was a "sport of the outsider, the eccentric, the nonconformist." The teammates, along with their classmates, were fired up to serve following a terrorist attack on U.S. soil, and three members of the team later died during active-duty service--two were killed in stateside accidents within months after graduation and one died in Iraq after an IED attack. A fourth teammate died of cancer after leaving the army. Drawing on his own love of rugby, personal reminiscences from the cadets, and in-depth reportage, Pengelly provides a vivid snapshot of his subjects and their experiences of war, combined with an elegiac meditation on the sport. It's a poignant account. (Oct.)Correction: An earlier version of this review incorrectly stated that two of the teammates were killed in Afghanistan.

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