Photojournalist speared by javelin at Utah track meet

AP photoMedical personnel stabilize newspaper photographer Ryan McGeeney's leg after he was pierced by a javelin directly below his right knee.

AP photoMedical personnel stabilize newspaper photographer Ryan McGeeney's leg after he was pierced by a javelin directly below his right knee.

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PROVO, Utah " A newspaper photographer got a little too close to the action at the state high school track championships " and was speared through the leg by a javelin.

Ryan McGeeney of the Standard-Examiner was spared serious injury in Saturday's mishap, and even managed to snap a photo of his speared leg while others worked to help him.

"If I didn't, it would probably be my editor's first question when I got back," McGeeney said later.

The 33-year-old McGeeney, an ex-Marine who spent six months in Afghanistan, was taking pictures of the discus event and apparently wandered into off-limits area set aside for the javelin throw.

Striking just below the knee, the javelin tip went through the skin and emerged on the other side of his leg.

"It wasn't real painful. ... I was very lucky in that it didn't hit any blood vessels, nerves, ligaments or tendons," McGeeney said.

Much of the javelin was cut off at the scene. The piece in McGeeney's leg was removed at a hospital, and he received 13 stitches.

The javelin was thrown by Anthony Miles, a Provo High School student who said when he saw what had happened, "my heart just stopped."

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