by Capt. Ashley Walker
12th Flying Training Wing Public Affairs
2/22/2013 - U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -- For
Mark Matticola, a civilian soaring instructor pilot assigned to the
94th Flying Training Squadron, being recognized as the most active
glider instructor in the nation by the Soaring Society of America was
easy.
"I get paid to do my hobby every day," said Matticola, who was
recognized earlier this month. "We mentor the cadets. We teach them
disciplined standards, enthusiasm and teamwork. The cadets do all the
real work."
Matticola, who is also a lieutenant colonel reservist assigned to the
70th Flying Training Squadron but attached to the 94th FTS, beat more
than 400 other soaring instructors from across the country for the
honor.
He is the first instructor recognized and certified as a master SSA
cross-country instructor in U.S. Air Force Academy history and is the
first instructor to be a national judge for the International Aerobatic
Club.
"I rely on Matti's talents daily to keep our young officer candidates
safe and to develop their Airmanship and Leadership," said Lt. Col. Brad
Roller, 94th FTS commander. "His contributions directly support the
Academy's mission to develop leaders of character."
Matticola is the coach for the 94th's Advanced Soaring Programs. They
include the Cadet Aerobatic Demonstration Team and the Cadet Sailplane
Racing Team. Each program is led entirely by cadets, but the squadron is
responsible for overseeing all aspects of training; from aerobatic
training, cross-country soaring and participation in intercollegiate
competitions. Throughout the course of the year Matticola instructs 12
cadets and five officers on each team.
According to Matticola, "For the Cadet Sailplane Racing Team to compete,
the tow plane carries the glider to 2,000 feet and then it is up to the
pilot to read the sky for weather and use the lift to soar as far as
they can."
Matticola is one of only 42 SSA master cross-country instructor pilots
in the nation and uses his knowledge to teach students after 15 flights
to go on cross-country soaring tasks. The average sailplane competition
flight last summer was 250 miles. These distances allowed the racing
team to break the distance record for most miles flown in U.S Air Force
Academy history with more than 30,700 miles flown in 2012.
"In advanced soaring, students are breaking records that I've never seen
before. I teach students to beat me; to be better than me. They are
learning faster than we can teach them," he said.
The 94th FTS' competitive soaring teams frequently compete against
civilian glider enthusiasts who have 20-30 years of experience. Despite
the odds, Matticola led the Cadet Aerobatic Demonstration Team to the
best season in more than 23 years, earning 77 medals and 27 trophies.
The 94th FTS conducts more than 16,000 training and competition soaring
sorties annually using 24 TG-15 and TG-16 aircraft. The squadron focuses
on developing officership, leadership and character in the more than
1,600 U.S. Air Force Academy cadets who go through its program each
year.
"The soaring program is an outstanding leadership lab for cadets.
Aviation experience is just a byproduct of what we do," Matticola said.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment