1st Battalion 22nd Infantry
Soldier/NCO of the Quarter
May 2013
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait.
Spc. Cale Buck, infantryman, Company B, 1st Battalion,
22nd Infantry Regiment,
1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division,
demonstrates how to properly search a person for weapons
during the Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Soldier/Noncommissioned Officer
of the Quarter competition, April 28, 2013.
Camp Buehring Soldiers compete
in Soldier, NCO of the Quarter
Published May 9, 2013 by Spc. Andrew Ingram
1st Armored Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait Two Soldiers were recognized by
Command Sergeant Major Edison Rebuck,
senior enlisted leader, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th
Infantry Division, as the brigade Noncommissioned officer
and Soldier of the Quarter, May 15, 2013.
Sgt. Michael Rodriguez, Company E, 1st Battalion, 22nd
Infantry Regiment,
and Spc. Cale Buck, Company B, 1st Bn., 22nd Inf. Reg.,
won the board by demonstrating mental, tactical and technical
excellence during a three-day gauntlet.
"At a Soldier of the Quarter board, we see the best a
battalion, company and platoon has to offer," Rebuck said.
"It's great to see the desire in these young Soldiers and
NCOs to push themselves, to win and to be recognized
as the best in the Raider Brigade."
The competition began with a military board, with Soldiers
answering questions about military policy, programs
and regulations, posed by Rebuck and each of the forward deployed
battalion's command sergeants major.
Buck, an infantryman, said the board posed the biggest challenge
to him during the competition.
"I had a lot of help preparing from the NCOs in my
platoon," Buck said. "Studying for the board opened up
my mind to a lot of aspects of the Army I didn't know; things I
can pass on to my Soldiers when I become an NCO myself."
In addition to the board, the Soldiers competed for top scores
during basic rifle marksmanship,
the Army Physical Fitness Test, and a land navigation course.
Many of the competitors experienced the most trouble during
Soldier tasks and drills lanes on the second day of competition,
said Rodriguez, a computer/detection systems repairer.
During the lanes competitors demonstrated basic Soldiering
skills, from proper detainee search procedures,
to identifying an enemy, and calling in artillery support.
"Some of these tasks take a lot of steps to complete,"
Rodriguez said. "Performing just one of them wrong
meant losing points from our overall scores. I read up on the
skills I needed to focus on, and worked with Soldiers
who are experts in the more technical tasks."
Rodriguez said he credits his leaders' and teams' faith in his
abilities for his success.
"Everyone has doubts about themselves, but when somebody
sees the potential in us, and pushes us to maximize
that potential, it helps us realize what we are really capable
of," he said.
Rodriguez and Buck began training for the U.S. Army Central
Command Soldier and NCO of the Quarter
within days of finishing the brigade level competition.
Rebuck said he expects an outstanding performance from Rodriguez
and Buck during the next level of competition,
slated to begin May 20.
"Winning is great, and I want to see these Soldiers
represent the Raider brigade well, but I believe conducting the
tasks
to standard, exerting 100 percent effort in everything they do,
is the indication of a true Soldier," Rebuck Said.
"It isn't about running through the events to win, but
conducting their tasks to standard to the best of their
abilities."
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait.
Sergeant Michael Rodriguez, computer/detection systems
repairer,
Company E, 1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment, 1st Armored
Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division,
assembles an M249 light machine gun during the Camp Buehring,
Kuwait, Noncommissioned Officer of the Quarter competition, April
28, 2013.
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