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    Reserve shooters hone marksmanship skills

    Reserve shooters hone marksmanship skills

    Photo By Cpl. Antwaun Jefferson | More than 100 reserve Marines participate in this year's Marine Corps Base Quantico...... read more read more

    QUANTICO, VIRGINIA, UNITED STATES

    10.17.2012

    Story by Lance Cpl. Antwaun Jefferson 

    Marine Corps Base Quantico   

    MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va. – More than 100 reserve Marines from across the country, such as New York, California and the District of Columbia, have enrolled in this year’s Marine Corps Base Quantico reserve Combat Marksmanship Coaches Course held Oct. 8 to Oct. 21 at the Weapon’s Training Battalion.

    “The purpose of the course is for the Marines to simply learn more than just the average shooter and then, as a coach, pass on the information they learned at the rifle and pistol ranges,” said Gunnery Sgt. Michelle Boyd, reserve CMCC assistant class leader and instructor. “There are coaches in the past who have passed the wrong information to shooters. We are trying to prevent that.”
    Marines come to the course with wide expectations about what they are really going to learn and how it will help them or their unit in the long run. In just a few weeks, those questions, and countless others, are answered.

    “I thought this was going to be a great opportunity to improve my shooting and I was right,” said Lance Cpl. Gary Pace, 6th Communication Battalion radio operator and Flushing, Queens, N.Y., native. “But not only did it improve my shooting, but know I have the capabilities to go to my unit and prepare my fellow Marines when they are going to the range.”

    The course is run solely by reserve instructors and many are members of the Marine Corps reserve shooting team. According to Boyd, there are certain skills and techniques the class is able to teach because of the depth of knowledge the instructors have gathered over their years of experience and training.

    “One of the best parts for me is to be trained by our instructors,” said Staff Sgt. Rj Reyes, Civil Affair Group staff noncommissioned officer and Frederick, Md., native. “These are a few of the top shooters in the Marine Corps. They have been in plenty of competitions on the national and international level. It’s an understatement to say they know what they are doing.”

    With in-depth classes about marksmanship taught by first-class instructors, it is not hard to see why more and more students sign up for this course every year. By the end, all students have noticeably improved and are excited to pass on the information they have learned.

    “This is an excellent course and I have seen a big improvement in myself and in the other students,” said Lance Cpl. Evan Vega, 4th Combat Engineer Battalion Charlie Company supply clerk and New York, N.Y., native. “I have heard a couple of students say they were shooting marksman when they arrived here, but are now shooting high expert. And it’s no surprise with instructors always eager to help us along the way. This has been a great experience.”

    In February, the next phase for these students could be the Combat Marksmanship Trainers Course, in which the Marines will learn to become instructors themselves.

    The reserve CMCC is not an MOS-specific course and any Marine could be a part of the class. There are certain qualifications, such as a rifle and pistol score, that might prohibit a Marine from attending. For a Marine to find out find out when there is a class coming up and the restrictions, they should contact their unit’s operations section.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.17.2012
    Date Posted: 10.25.2012 16:51
    Story ID: 96773
    Location: QUANTICO, VIRGINIA, US

    Web Views: 168
    Downloads: 0

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