POW-MIA  United States  United Kingdom  Denmark  Bulgaria  Poland  Spain  Ukraine  Italy  Thailand  Estonia  El Salvador  Netherlands  Slovakia  Latvia  Hungary  Australia  Kazakhstan  Fiji  Romania  Canada  South Korea
   The Iraq Page
 
Remembering Those who Lost Their Lives
in the Iraq War of 2003 - 2006

 
 
 Welcome to The Iraq Page Tuesday, March 09 2010 @ 10:04 PM MST  
 Home  :  Contribute  :  Directory  :  Web Resources  :  List of War Dead  :  Printable List of Dead  :  About the Iraq Page  

John J. Mattek Jr.

   
Individuals USAssociated Press -- ANTIGO, Wis. — A Marine who was the president of his class three out of four years in high school in Antigo died Monday from wounds he received in Iraq last week, the Department of Defense said.

Lance Cpl. John J. Mattek Jr., 24, suffered the injuries in a June 8 explosion as part of combat operations against enemy forces in Anbar province, the Pentagon said.

Mattek is the 39th Wisconsin service member to be killed in Iraq.

“He was a great kid,” Tom Weix, Mattek’s wrestling coach when he was a high school senior, recalled Monday. “It’s pretty sad. He was a go-getter, definitely a leader.”

Jill Mattek of Deerbrook, north of Antigo, said her brother graduated from Antigo High School and then attended the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

She said their parents had traveled to Maryland, where Mattek had been flown for treatment. He died in the hospital there early Monday.



Mattek was assigned to the 2nd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, Regimental Combat Team-2, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force out of Camp Lejeune, N.C., the Defense Department said.

As of Monday, at least 1,701 members of the U.S. military have died since the start of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to the Defense Department.

Antigo High Principal Thomas Zamzow said Mattek played football and wrestled at the school, graduating in 1999. Zamzow coached Mattek when he was eighth-grade quarterback.

“I could tell even then he definitely was a leader and a motivator of the team. He was willing to step up and set a good example,” Zamzow said.

According to Zamzow, Mattek was president of his class when he was a freshman, sophomore and senior. He was a captain of the football team when he was a senior linebacker and was among those in his class voted most likely to succeed.

“He was one of those kids who you appreciated because he was willing to take on responsibility and be a leader,” the principal said.

Weix said Mattek wrestled in one of the heavier weight classes, 160 to 171 pounds, as a senior and made it to the sectionals but didn’t qualify for the state tournament.

“He was one of our strongest kids,” the coach recalled. “He was very competitive. He was a very hard worker. He loved the weight room.”

Mattek’s younger brother and a cousin now wrestle for the team, Weix said.

After high school, Mattek went to UW-Stevens Point and took just some general classes, Weix said. He made the Pointers football team and played on its special teams, Weix said.

Weix said he saw Mattek last Christmas but they never talked about why Mattek joined the Marines or about his future goals.

“He was a unique individual. He just lived life to the fullest,” Weix said. “He would make a good Marine. If you gave him a job, he would complete it.”

 

What's Related

Story Options

Trackback

Trackback URL for this entry: http://iraq.pigstye.net/trackback.php/MattekJohnJ

No trackback comments for this entry.
John J. Mattek Jr. | 9 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Wednesday, June 15 2005 @ 08:48 PM MDT
Rest in Heavenly peace Lance Corporal John Mattek.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Friday, June 17 2005 @ 10:42 PM MDT
I am proud to have served with you. You will be greatly missed. The impact you have made on those around you will never be forgotten and neither will you. I know we'll meet again another time another place where the beer is cold and the women are hot and we have nothing better to do then to have a good time. Take it easy bro. Later.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Sunday, June 19 2005 @ 07:51 PM MDT
I am proud that a person as awesome as you served our country. You will always hold a special place in my heart. You are the original stuntman and we will all miss you.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Wednesday, June 22 2005 @ 04:10 PM MDT
I attended John's funeral on monday. This young man had everything going for him. How quickly I take for granted my family, my faith, my freedom. Thank God for men like Johnny Mattek. They are what makes America great.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Wednesday, July 06 2005 @ 09:44 PM MDT
Johnny. You will never be forgotten and always be missed. I am proud to have known you and hope we meet again one day buddy.
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Friday, July 29 2005 @ 09:26 PM MDT
John,
I would like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for our Country. And to your family, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

Semper Fi Devil Dog!
John J. Mattek Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Tuesday, July 24 2007 @ 11:28 AM MDT
To the man You are a very important part of so manys lives. You may be gone but you will never be forgotten. We will meet agin someday and I will have to buy you a nice cold drink. Your favorite Jack and coke. You a hell of a man Hodag and Checkpoint will never be the same. See you agin someday. I know you looking down on us keep mit real. Your greatly missed. The Bryant bunch
 Copyright © 2010 The Iraq Page
 All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.
Powered By Geeklog 
Created this page in 0.51 seconds