38 F
Clarksville
Thursday, March 28, 2024
HomeNewsFort Campbell Lifeliners compete to be best Stinger

Fort Campbell Lifeliners compete to be best Stinger

Written by Sgt. Leejay Lockhart
101st Sustainment Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (AA) Public Affairs

101st Sustainment Brigade - LifelinersFort Campbell KY - 101st Airborne Division

Fort Campbell, KY – Teams of soldiers from the 2nd Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, 101st Sustainment Brigade “Lifeliners,” 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), competed in six events September 30th – October 3rd, at Fort Campbell. The competition was an opportunity for the soldiers to demonstrate their skills and win recognition as the best Stinger missile or Sentinel radar team in the battalion.

“The best Stinger competition just takes what you know and puts it against what everyone else knows basically,” said Spc. John Rickel, an Avenger crew member with Battery C “Hell Fighters,” 2-44th ADA and one half of the winning best Stinger missile team. “You have your major categories, your crew drills, physical abilities and you’re just seeing who’s the best.”

Sgt. Gregory Brookes, an Avenger team chief from Battery C, 2nd Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery, 101st Sustainment Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), carries approximately 80 pounds of gear including a Stinger missile simulator during the last stretch of a 12-mile road march Oct. 3, at Fort Campbell, Ky. The road march was the last event in a competition to determine the best Stinger missile team in the battalion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Leejay Lockhart, 101st Sustainment Brigade Public Affairs)
Sgt. Gregory Brookes, an Avenger team chief from Battery C, 2nd Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery, 101st Sustainment Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), carries approximately 80 pounds of gear including a Stinger missile simulator during the last stretch of a 12-mile road march Oct. 3, at Fort Campbell, Ky. The road march was the last event in a competition to determine the best Stinger missile team in the battalion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Leejay Lockhart, 101st Sustainment Brigade Public Affairs)

The competition tested the soldiers in a variety of ways. The first event was an Army physical fitness test to access their overall fitness. Then competitors faced off on the Sabalauski Air Assault School obstacle course. Later they competed on a land navigation course, which helped demonstrate their soldier skills. Up next was the written portion of the competition that tested them on their technical knowledge. After that, they performed crew drills, which required them to work together to prepare an Avenger for combat. The competition’s final event was a 12-mile road march.

“The easiest [event] to me was the crew drills and the most challenging one was the ruck march,” said Sgt. Gregory Brookes, an Avenger team chief also with Battery C and the other half of the winning best Stinger missile team. “Well basically you’re carrying your basic load which you would actually carry and on top of that you’re adding the Stinger missile. So that made it a little hard.”

He estimated that the total load when carrying the Stinger missile simulator was more than 80 pounds.

Spc. Kendal Smithson, an Avenger team chief from Battery C, 2nd Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery, 101st Sustainment Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), passes a Stinger missile simulator to Spc. Coree Duboise, an Avenger crew member also from Battery C, during timed and graded crew drill event Oct. 2, at Fort Campbell, Ky. The event was part of a competition to determine the best Stinger missile team in the battalion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Leejay Lockhart, 101st Sustainment Brigade Public Affairs)Rickel agree that the road march was the hardest part of the competition.

“That was really hard for me,” said Rickel, a native of Meadville, PA. “Sgt. Brookes is in a lot better shape than I am… but I wasn’t going to let Sgt. Brookes finish without me. It’s really difficult. You just kinda gotta take it one step at a time.”

Brookes set a swift pace in the darkness at the beginning of the road march. However, Rickel had to ask him to slow down slightly. He was afraid he’d burn out miles later. Although Brookes had the ability to finish faster, it didn’t matter. For this to count, they had to finish as a team.

Although the unit had only paired them together a few weeks prior they quickly meshed. Both said they felt confident in their individual knowledge. Though working together was what helped them throughout the competition.

The event that required the most team work was the crew drills. To achieve success in this two part event required precisely performing a set sequence of actions. Those actions demonstrated their ability to quickly mount an M3P machine gun to an Avenger in the first part and then loading the Avenger’s missile pods with Stinger missile simulators in the second. An observer timed and graded them. It required them to closely coordinate their actions to do it efficiently.

“The biggest thing with crew drills is just communication,” said Rickel. “If you just communicate well everything works so much better.”

Brookes, a native of Orlando, FL, added that they went over everything before the event. They made sure they knew the correct way to do everything.

“Then we just went ahead and executed.”

Spc. Steven Thomas, an Avenger crew member from Battery C, 2nd Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery, 101st Sustainment Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), works with Staff Sgt. Jeremy Capps, an Avenger team chief also from Battery C, to mount a M3P machine gun to an Avenger Oct. 2, at Fort Campbell, Ky. The soldiers demonstrated their ability to rapidly prepare an Avenger for combat during a crew drill event that was part of a competition to determine the best Stinger missile team in the battalion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Leejay Lockhart, 101st Sustainment Brigade Public Affairs)It was more than just the two of them forging a sense of unity. Members of their battery offered encouragement to them, especially on the final leg of the road march. They surrounded the two tired soldiers and urged them on, urged them to go faster and just urged them to finish strong. Feelings of unit pride motivated both of them. Although they had a lead, other competitors were working hard to close the distance and win the competition.

“The whole time going into we knew we were the first team in the ruck march for Charlie and I didn’t want to be the reason Charlie didn’t get that third victory,” said Rickel. “So it felt awesome being able to get that victory for them.”

“We’re the Hell Fighters, always coming in first place, always going to come in first place,” said Brookes.

In the end, the competition is just one way the battalion trains its soldiers on their air defense skills and maintains combat readiness. The hard work allows them to fulfill an important role on the battlefield.

“Take down anything that flies,” said Brookes. “If it flies it dies.”

RELATED ARTICLES

Latest Articles