By Michael Molinaro
USAMU PAO
LAS VEGAS – Soldiers from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit
(USAMU) Action Shooting team won two titles at the 2014 U.S. Practical Shooting
Association Multi-gun National Championships, April 18-20.
Staff Sgt. Daniel Horner won the overall title and first
place in the Tactical Ops Division for an unprecedented sixth time, while Sgt.
Matthew Sweeney won in the Heavy Metal Tactical Division.
“This is a huge match and being crowned a national champion
is very prestigious,” said Sweeney, a Pinckneyville, Ill native. “We train up
year-round just to get the title so it’s a great achievement for me.
“We have a great team behind us. We have unlimited support
from the chain of command, great gunsmiths and a great unit behind us.”
It has been an impressive April for Horner. The Suffolk,
Va.,native started off the month winning the U.S. Special Operations Command
International Sniper Competition with teammate Sgt. Tyler Payne. After that, he
won his second straight 3-Gun Nation
Pro Series Tour win before securing this
latest national championship in Las Vegas. The win marks his sixth national
title in the Tactical Ops Division, the first shooter to ever accomplish the
feat in the sports largest division.
“2014 has been good,” Horner said. “No one guy is great but
together we can accomplish some pretty good things. We all support each other
to make good decisions and come up with a good plan. You are still on your own
when the clock goes off, but we keep each other focused on the goal at hand.”
All five USAMU shooters who competed this year finished in
the top five in their respective divisions.
Unlike other competitions that focus on short-range shooting
and shooting on the move, the Practical Shooting Association Multi-gun National
Championships test shooters using odd-positions, barricades, stage planning,
and long-range rifle targets in addition to moving quickly through stages.
“This year the shooting was difficult, but the speed at
which you had to make the shots was so high that you couldn’t make any
mistakes,” Horner said. “You would run out of shotgun ammo at some point if you
missed one shot and (that’s a ten point penalty.)”
Highlighting the difference between AMU shooters and their
civilian counterparts, after the awards ceremony, Horner and Sweeny jumped on a
plane to train Soldiers preparing for deployment. Besides showcasing the very
best of Army skills in competition, the unit applies lessons learned from
marksmanship competitions to training Soldiers for combat and raising the
Army’s Marksmanship proficiency.
Even after six national titles and a ranking as one of the
best sniper teams currently in the world, Horner said he’ll never get to a
point where he thinks he knows it all.
“I learn something every day,” Horner concluded. “I can
learn something from every single person shooting and use it to help someone
else or help me.”
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