CAMP SMITH TRAINING SITE, N.Y. - Sgt. Anthony R. Sturgis from Maine and Spc. Eythan Caputo of New Hampshire were named the 2013 top enlisted Army National Guard Noncommissioned Officer (sergeant, or NCO) and Soldier of the Year, respectively, for the northeastern states following a two-day competition here.
The New York Army National Guard and New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs hosted the Northeast Region Best Warrior competition at Camp Smith May 15-17.
Sixteen soldiers from Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New York and New Jersey all participated with their top soldier and NCO for the competition that challenged the soldiers' physical fitness, military knowledge, endurance, marksmanship, and land navigation skills.
Sturgis and Caputo will now go on to compete against other Army Guard soldiers to decide the best NCO and soldier in the entire Army National Guard in a final competition against representatives of the active Army and the United States Army Reserve later this year.
During the competition eight junior enlisted soldiers – soldiers from the ranks of private, private first class, and specialist - competed against each other for the Best Soldier title, while eight noncommissioned officers in the rank of sergeant, staff sergeant, or sergeant first class compete to be the Best NCO.
Senior noncommissioned officers from the eight northeastern states will run the competition.
"It's very intense," said Maine Army National Guard Spc. Lisa Bryant. "We have the best of the best from every state here, well I should say New England, and we're all giving it 150 percent."
The annual competition helps build soldier skills across the force, said New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Major Frank Wicks.
The competition tested the soldiers' knowledge in the areas of military justice, field sanitation, security and intelligence operations, military courtesy, leadership, counseling and how to deal with chemical and biological weapons. The participants negotiated land navigation courses by day and night, and took an Army Physical Fitness Test to determine who received the top score.
Participants were quizzed by a board of senior sergeants who evaluated them on their ability to handle stress and military appearance, as well.
They were graded in their ability to handle hands-on military tasks, as well as their marksmanship ability with the M4. The contestants qualified with their weapon and also negotiated a "stress shoot" event which tested their ability to engage targets while maneuvering, and pulling a simulated casualty.
Soldiers also participated in a 10-kilometer road march around the Camp Smith site.
New York's two competitors, Sgt. 1st Class David Colliton, an Amsterdam, N.Y., resident, and Spc. Rachel Blanchette, a Patchogue, N.Y., resident, completed the competition and will return to their units to encourage future soldiers to prepare and compete for the 2014 title as Best Warrior.
Colliton spoke highly of his competitors and of the camaraderie of the training event.
"They're my fellow warriors," said Colliton. "We're all one team, one fight. Maybe something I can't do well, another soldier can."
"The competition really made me find out a lot about myself and how hard I can push myself," Caputo said following his selection as New Hampshire Army National Guard Soldier of the Year April 19, prior to this week's competition. "It is really good to have that experience."
Date Taken: | 05.17.2013 |
Date Posted: | 05.17.2013 18:34 |
Story ID: | 107170 |
Location: | CAMP SMITH, NEW YORK, US |
Hometown: | AMSTERDAM, NEW YORK, US |
Hometown: | AUGUSTA, MAINE, US |
Hometown: | CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, US |
Hometown: | PATCHOGUE, NEW YORK, US |
Web Views: | 168 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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