Ranger Special Operations Combat Medics (68 Whiskey – Whiskey 1) “Docs”

Ranger Special Operations Combat Medics are affectionately called “Doc” by the men. This is an exclusive group of men who, in addition to all the Special Operations tactical training they receive in order to become an elite Army Ranger, they volunteer, qualify and are selected, for an extensive 9-12 months (36 weeks is the standard length of the SOCM course, 12 months would be if you recycle) of additional Combat Medic training.  With their ‘Service before Self’ motto, these men have saved many lives, several of whom will be in attendance that evening.

A unique aspect about the Ranger medics is that he must volunteer for and pass 5 separate stages: Basic Training/Advanced Individual Training, Airborne, Ranger Assessment and Selection Program, Pre-Special Operations Combat Medical training, Special Combat Medical training. In order to be assigned to the unit he must have completed each phase which is 80 total weeks of training. Once assigned to the unit, Ranger medics are continually assessed and trained in order to validate their ability to perform to the stringent requirements of the 75th Ranger Regiment and the United States Special Operations Command.

 

Coach Mike Krzyzewski “Coach K”

Winning seasons, superb graduation rates for his players and a basketball team that is as close as family, are all attributes that reflect on the man who is now in his 36th season as the head coach of the Blue Devils, Mike Krzyzewski. Although some still stumble with pronouncing and spelling his name, when people speak of the highest level of success in the college basketball world, the name Krzyzewski (Sha-shef-skee) immediately comes to mind.

Coach K solidified his status in the upper echelon of coaching on Nov. 15, 2011, when he became the winningest coach in college basketball history with a 74-69 Duke win over Michigan State at Madison Square Garden. Krzyzewski returned to MSG on January 25, 2015, to achieve another historic milestone when he became the first NCAA Division I men’s basketball coach to reach 1,000 career wins with a 77-68 victory over St. John’s.

He began his coaching career in 1975 as the head basketball coach at Army, where he played from 1966 to 1969 under Bob Knight. Since 1980, he has served as the head men’s basketball coach at Duke University where he led the Blue Devils to five NCAA Championships, 12 Final Fours, 12 ACC regular season titles, and 13 ACC Tournament championships. Krzyzewski is also the coach of the United States men’s national basketball team, which he led to two gold medals at the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2012 Summer Olympics. He was the head coach of the American team that won the gold medals at the 2010 FIBA World Championship and the 2014 FIBA World Championship. He was also an assistant coach for the 1992 “Dream Team”.

Although he has earned nearly every award imaginable, Krzyzewski was rewarded with the ultimate honor in basketball in 2001 when he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Since that induction, Krzyzewski has also been inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame (Sept. 11, 2009), Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame (2010) and Duke Athletics Hall of Fame (2011).

In 2005, Krzyzewski became the youngest recipient of the Distinguished Graduate Award at the United States Military Academy. He garnered another prestigious military honor in 2014 when he was awarded the George Catlett Marshall Medal, the highest award presented by the Association of the United States Army. The Marshall Medal is awarded annually to an individual, who has exhibited selfless service to the United States of America.

Remembering September 11th

It is still impossible to make sense of the horrific events that occurred on that fateful Tuesday, September 11th, 14 years ago today. The countless lives that were lost and the countless lives that have been lost and forever changed thanks to all the incredibly amazing men and women who have gone to battle the ‘War on Terrorism’ since then.

We are thinking and praying for of all those families who lost so much that day and in the years following. WE WILL NEVER FORGET.