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U.S. Army Marksmanship Soldiers Return Home With Multiple Shooting Titles

Friday, August 27th, 2010 at 10:01 AM

U.S. Army Marksmanship Soldiers Return Home With Multiple Shooting Titles
By Michael Molinaro
USAMU PAO

Army Marksmanship Units Service Pistol team

CAMP PERRY, Ohio – Soldiers from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit’s Service Pistol team won the National Pistol Championship overall team championship. Team members were: (front) Staff Sgt. Lyman Grover; Staff Sgt. Robert Park; and Staff Sgt. Patrick Franks. (back) Sgt. 1st Class James Henderson; Sgt. 1st Class Gregory Wilson; and staff Sgt. John Ennis.

United States Army Marksmanship Unit

United States Army Marksmanship Unit

FORT BENNING, Ga. --(Ammoland.com)- Soldiers from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit completed one of the unit’s most successful runs in recent years at the 2010 National Rifle and Pistol Championship, winning multiple individual and team championships, setting national records, and upholding the unit’s reputation as the “Home of Champions.”

Accomplishing the unit’s mission to enhance the Army’s recruiting effort and raise the Army’s combat readiness takes up a lot of the Soldiers time, so the USAMU Soldiers’ intense desire to train to win enabled them to prevail at Camp Perry.

“Our expansive mission of supporting the war-fighter limits the amount of time available to prepare for the National Championship,” said Sgt. 1st Class Kyle Ward, noncommissioned officer-in-charge of the service rifle team

“When the team is able to come together and train, everyone is extremely focused on the task at hand.”

The crowning achievement for the unit was finishing first in all of the major team competitions at the championships. The USAMU Service Pistol’s Blue team started things off by winning the “Coming Through the Rye” trophy as the top four-man pistol team, winning the title for the second time in the unit’s history.

Soldiers from the International Rifle team followed that up by winning the prone any sight team championship during the smallbore matches, defending their crown from a year ago. Soldiers from the Service Rifle team completed the sweep, winning the “Dogs of War” trophy and the coveted National Trophy Infantry Team match.

Much of the team’s success is credited to teamwork, Ward said. Soldiers helped each other out during training sessions, communicated well during the matches, and, as is always the case at the USAMU, the Custom Firearms Shop provided the direct support that enables the USAMU to stand tall above the rest.

“I attribute much of our success to the professionals in the Custom Firearms Shop and loading facility who went the extra mile in ensuring that we had the best equipment possible,” said Ward.

Individually, USAMU Soldiers stood out amongst the huge field of more than 6,000 competitors throughout the six-week period in July and August.

Sgt. Sherri Jo Gallagher persevered against one of the toughest field of competitors in the history of rifle competitions to win the national high-powered rifle championship. Gallagher set a new national record in the process with a score of 2396-161x, beating out a ten-time champion, a four-time champion, and the defending champion.

She is the first service member to win the championship since 1987 and only the second woman ever to do so—her mother was the first. Gallagher won eight individual matches, seven aggregate championships and set four other national records over the course of the week.

Staff Sgt. Shane Barnhart swept the field during the smallbore matches, winning both the national three-position and prone championships, the second consecutive year a USAMU Soldier has accomplished the incredible feat and only the third shooter ever in the history of the matches. It was the fourth time he won the three-position championship.

“I have been close to winning the prone before, but this year I was hungry for it,” Barnhart said. “I worked my butt off during the entire nationals. I never let up.”

“Being only the third person in history to double up on the championships feels amazing. This motivates me to really train hard to make the Olympic team and World Cups.”

Staff Sgt. Robert Park led the way for the Service Pistol team. Park won the prestigious President’s Pistol Trophy for the second time and finished in third place overall at the National Pistol Championship, his first time making the podium. He was a member of three team championships and won three other individual titles, including the overall service pistol champion during the Civilian Marksmanship Program’s National Trophy Pistol matches.

Soldiers are primed for a busy fall season conducting marksmanship training for Soldiers preparing to deploy. Combining the unit’s performance at the nationals with their sheer dominance in the Interservice competitions, the training those deploying Soldiers will receive will undoubtedly come from the best.

Army Marksmanship Unit fire on their targets

CAMP PERRY, Ohio – Soldiers from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit fire on their targets from 600 yards away during the National Infantry Trophy Rifle team match Aug. 6. The USAMU won the match, soundly defeating 41 other six-man teams. (Photo by Michael Molinaro, USAMU PAO)

Sgt Lawrence Cleveland and Staff Sgt Patrick Franks

CAMP PERRY, Ohio – Sgt. Lawrence Cleveland (left) and Staff Sgt. Patrick Franks (right) compete during the National Trophy Team Pistol match July 18 at Camp Perry. It was the first national championships as members of the USAMU for both Soldiers they fared exceptionally well. Cleveland won the Excellence-in-Competition match and Franks was a member of the first place team at the nationals. (Photo by Michael Molinaro, USAMU PAO)

USAMU Soldiers

USAMU Soldiers Return Home With Multiple Shooting Titles

About USAMU:
The USAMU’s mission is to raise the standard of marksmanship proficiency and combat readiness throughout the Army by sharing knowledge gained from competing and winning in national/ international competitions, research and development and advanced training programs while enhancing the Army’s recruiting effort through an active public information and public relations program. For more information on the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit, contact the Public Affairs Office at (706) 545-5436, Michael.Molinaro@usaac.army.mil or www.USAMU.com .

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Shane Barnhart Wins both NRA National Smallbore Three-Position & Prone Championships at Camp Perry

Friday, August 6th, 2010 at 12:04 PM

Shane Barnhart Wins both NRA National Smallbore Three-Position and Smallbore Prone Championships at Camp Perry

National Rifle Association

National Rifle Association

FAIRFAX, VA --(Ammoland.com)- Staff Sergeant Shane Barnhart with the Army Marksmanship Unit (USAMU) based in Fort Benning, Georgia, claimed his first Prone Championship title and fourth 3-Position Championship at the NRA Smallbore Championships held July 22-29 at Camp Perry near Port Clinton, Ohio.

Barnhart, from Phenix City, Alabama, became only the third person to win Camp Perry’s Three-Position Championships and Prone Championships in the same year. His teammate Joseph Hein accomplished this feat last year and Lones Wigger Jr. did it once in 1963 and again in 1973.

After clinching the 3-Position Championships with a score of 2358-126X, Barnhart got off to a slow start in the Prone Championships before coming back strong to take first place with a 4790-355X.

Camp Perry’s infamous wind wasn’t the only challenge Barnhart faced in the Prone Championships.

“I knew going into Any Sight that I had Abalo and Kemp, both very fine shooters, to keep up with,” Shane said of his fellow shooters.

1LT Christopher Abalo of Glendora, California, also on the USAMU, took the Prone Championship’s silver medal with an aggregate of 4786-355X. Charles Kemp from Mobile, Alabama, rounded out the top three and was awarded bronze as well as High Civilian and High Senior with a 4786-338X.

In the 3-Position Championships, Corland, Ohio’s Amanda Luoma claimed silver along with the titles of Woman Champion, Junior Champion and Civilian Champion by shooting a 2349-113X. Megan Lee of Fuquay Varina, North Carolina, took the bronze and Intermediate Junior Champion title with her 2343-93X.

Amanda McMullin from Pomona, California, shot her way to the 2010 Woman Champion title in the Prone Championships, finishing with a 4780-313X aggregate.

The National Rifle Association and the Civilian Marksmanship Program conduct the National Matches at Camp Perry each summer. Participants range in experience levels from novices to Olympic-level shooters, and include civilians, military personnel, and law enforcement officers. The NRA National Rifle and Pistol Championships are open to everyone; NRA membership is not required.

For more information about the National Rifle and Pistol Championships at Camp Perry or other competitive shooting events or programs, visit www.nrahq.org/compete or call (703) 267-1450.

About:
Established in 1871, the National Rifle Association is America’s oldest civil rights and sportsmen’s group. Four million members strong, NRA continues its mission to uphold Second Amendment rights and to advocate enforcement of existing laws against violent offenders to reduce crime. The Association remains the nation’s leader in firearm education and training for law-abiding gun owners, law enforcement and the military. Visit: www.nra.org

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