Making The Jump From Ranger Regiment To The Unit w/ Jamey Caldwell

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • 21 year veteran SGM(r) Jamey Caldwell tells us what the transition from 75th Ranger Regiment to The Unit was like and why he made the move.
    Jamey's company:
    www.1minuteout...
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    / theteamhouse
    Jamey's full episode:
    • Jamey Caldwell | Unit ...
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    #theunit #selection #jsoc

Комментарии • 156

  • @hillbillyrecovery4345
    @hillbillyrecovery4345 2 года назад +287

    I wanted to be a ranger so bad. From the time I was a little kid. When it came time to sign up I let a damn girl talk me out of it. By the time we broke up I was making amazing money for a 20 year old. So it was out of my head. Then by 05 it was back in my head. On my way the rct office I got into a horrible wreck. Almost didn't make it. After that it took 10 years to get where I could walk without any type of support. I tell this story for younger ppl. Go after your dream immediately don't wait. Don't put it off.

    • @sumtingwong8768
      @sumtingwong8768 2 года назад +7

      Isn't it the case that most of those guys just sit around and twiddle their thumbs, they have to fight for missions, money, training, etc. Sounds like its not like they portray once you get on the inside, maybe I'm off though, entirely possible.

    • @brian3786
      @brian3786 2 года назад +3

      Thank you sir. I’m 18 and in a similar predicament. Already scored 95 on my asvab and still gotta do my physical tests. Going to try and ship out in September after I come back from Mexico in august. I have a wife over there and was considering settling down and building a stable life but I don’t want to regret it later

    • @hillbillyrecovery4345
      @hillbillyrecovery4345 2 года назад +10

      @@brian3786 wait on marriage. I promise you. You don't realize how much you will change by the time your 25. If this is you dream chase it first. After marriage or a kid everything that you want doesn't even exist anymore. A man puts his family above all so that's why I say go after your dream first you have the rest of your life for the rest. Good luck.

    • @hermanhenderson966
      @hermanhenderson966 2 года назад +3

      @@brian3786 dont get married look into divorce stats and what men go through. You’ll thank yourself.

    • @sourrrrrrrr
      @sourrrrrrrr 2 года назад +1

      @@sumtingwong8768 I've never been in but the 75th has been deployed constantly for over 7000 days and counting, (Although they are broke up between 3 and now 4 battalions) training so much that one unit (I don't know what size, probably a battalion) fired over 600,000 rounds in training over the course of 3-4 weeks, deployed so often that some don't consider you a real Ranger unless you've been on at least 1 deployment with the 75th, and the most HVT capture/kill missions in the entire military. Also you are supposed to go to Ranger school after getting in the 75th but many actually just get deployed THEN Ranger school.
      From what I've heard, you are describing the normal army, not the 75th.

  • @googleaccountname6768
    @googleaccountname6768 24 дня назад +1

    What a great lesson in humility to anyone who treats support guys as less than equals. This gentleman goes from a low density MOS E6(P) in the 75th to a E9 operator in CAG.

  • @Zooka208
    @Zooka208 2 года назад +137

    I had a CO be selected almost 20 years ago.. always wondered how his life turned out. Great channel, ty for videos

    • @hereticlife2546
      @hereticlife2546 2 года назад +10

      If you remember his name there’s so many of these guys out there you should be able to get a hold of some of them. If he made it surely someone knows of him

    • @TheDHM3007
      @TheDHM3007 2 года назад +3

      Lol Guy literally went ghost

    • @sumtingwong8768
      @sumtingwong8768 2 года назад +1

      Do you know how much action they get, is it really just sitting around looking cool and training but never really being used. What's your estimate 80% don't do jack sh*t?

    • @anthonyberardinelli8767
      @anthonyberardinelli8767 2 года назад +3

      @@sumtingwong8768 Delta and other tier 1 units have a continuous rotation i believe and what I mean by that, you always have a teams training, teams rotating back from tours and usually a team resting for a short period. Because of what they do, I doubt they have a lot of down time but I'm not sure because I was never in the military

    • @sumtingwong8768
      @sumtingwong8768 2 года назад

      @@anthonyberardinelli8767 you sound like you know a fair bit, of what you know, who gets the most direct action, Rangers? why I say rangers is because they seem to only have that as their mission purpose.

  • @billlawrence8520
    @billlawrence8520 2 года назад +46

    Team House, thanks for breaking down your long form interviews, into bite-sized chunks. Easier to watch and grasp. Thanks .

  • @fredericklockard3854
    @fredericklockard3854 2 года назад +17

    I served as a support guy in 10th Group at Carson and it was the best assignment of my 20 year career. True professionals. They treated all of us support guys with respect and taught me a lot. I have been in other units where they treated support people as less than them and that is a shame.

    • @nickgerr1991
      @nickgerr1991 Год назад +2

      Ayyyy I've spent time at Carson this past year, if you've ever seen a lone marsoc dude chillin with 10th, that was me😅

    • @fredericklockard3854
      @fredericklockard3854 Год назад +1

      @@nickgerr1991 doubtful bro. I was there likely when you were just a little dude 😂.

    • @nickgerr1991
      @nickgerr1991 Год назад

      @@fredericklockard3854 damn lmaoooo, I just noticed you said 20 years...damn, I'm not even a quarter of a century old ahahaha

    • @fredericklockard3854
      @fredericklockard3854 Год назад +1

      @@nickgerr1991 oh hell. So I was at Carson when you were not even a gleam in your daddy’s eye. Good stuff! God bless you Marine.

  • @georgecoull1883
    @georgecoull1883 2 года назад +10

    Thank you gentlemen for telling these stories and keeping the memories of the fallen alive and letting the heroes tell their own stories. Mr Parke , Mr Murphy You are doing a great service to the country! From the bottom of my heart thank you!

  • @Hashtag6B9
    @Hashtag6B9 2 года назад +48

    coming from an 11b, even though you're an enabler in a SOF unit, you still deserve the same respect as a 11/18 series Operator.

    • @motiman2466
      @motiman2466 2 года назад +2

      absolutely agreed. I'm glad someone said it

    • @G4x5da
      @G4x5da Год назад

      He was a operator

    • @Bobby223boucher
      @Bobby223boucher 9 месяцев назад

      @@G4x5dayou didn’t watch the video? He clearly states he was support in the regiment. Which is why he doubted himself some. Once he passed selection and went to Delta then yes he was an operator

    • @G4x5da
      @G4x5da 9 месяцев назад

      @@Bobby223boucher so he was a operator yes?

  • @LvoZee05
    @LvoZee05 2 года назад +39

    Might I suggest a good guest or guests.
    Sean Rodgers(10th group, author, fng academy), Daniel Burnett(1/75 and owner of Train Like a Ranger), and Michael Golembesky(former MARSOC, author)

    • @LvoZee05
      @LvoZee05 2 года назад +2

      Dagger 22 is Golembesky's book. It is phenomenal

    • @michealsealy1908
      @michealsealy1908 2 года назад +2

      Sean book is amazing loved it read it a couple times

    • @songen1042
      @songen1042 2 года назад +2

      I want Clyde Carmody or Isaiah Burkhart, both of which Jack served with

    • @LvoZee05
      @LvoZee05 2 года назад +1

      @@songen1042 they were on the team room on sofrep before jack went on his own. Definitely like that suggestion

    • @GageCahoon
      @GageCahoon 2 года назад +1

      Yeahhhh 2nd vote for Dan

  • @patrickdevine1085
    @patrickdevine1085 Год назад +3

    So many people forget that regiment have many MOS fields which without the regiment and the battalions don’t work.

  • @mr.nobody68
    @mr.nobody68 2 года назад +9

    Had I known then what I know now, I would have tried to go to RASP to become a Ranger.
    I would have failed and been dropped/kicked from the course but, I still would have given it my all

  • @abovethenoise1718
    @abovethenoise1718 Год назад +3

    I think Sean "buck" Rogers said at the best, when he was talking about how he got recycled on ranger assessment selection program and he had a choice to go to Special forces with the green berets, and called it a gentleman's course. At least when compared to most everything Ranger and before.

    • @vitigaymer1053
      @vitigaymer1053 Год назад

      I'm pretty sure Sean meant the Instructors aren't hounding/hazing you in SFAS like they do in RASP.

  • @metallicknight2
    @metallicknight2 2 года назад +5

    Jamey, I hear you about Savanah. I got to my Engineer unit at Stewart in April of '99. I met some of your Ranger batt guys over on Stewart many times. Great dudes, tbh. After we got back from Bright Star, we did a few JRX with the Rangers. Glad to see you made it, and healthy, brother.

    • @jonosay854
      @jonosay854 5 месяцев назад

      I lived in the Hinesville Inn for 3 months when i first arrived in Dec 99. That town sucked!! Was a Kmart and a BBQ restaurant lol

  • @hoyavp2236
    @hoyavp2236 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for your service, Brother.

  • @pauldarling330
    @pauldarling330 2 года назад +11

    Felt that over train. Trained my ass off for ranger school, got a stress fracture 1 month out Stopped all training. Showed up and first hard ruck it came back. Then 2 more weeks limping along until cadre finally dropped me.

    • @chrishandsome4267
      @chrishandsome4267 2 года назад +6

      It’s all good brother, you gave it your best shot. I was in the unit for 8 years & it was the best time of my life but also the worst.

    • @russellcoight9376
      @russellcoight9376 2 года назад +7

      @@chrishandsome4267 Yeah I was in the seal delta unit aswell with the marines from 75th battalion ranger recon aswell

  • @Bobby223boucher
    @Bobby223boucher 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome video. I had always assumed Jamey was a 11B with the Ranger Regiment before going to selection. He’s a badass operator and fisherman

  • @GODISPOWER777
    @GODISPOWER777 2 года назад +13

    You are the people like myself who can not complete a mission without your support. 11B or not we all need to work as a team and get it done.

  • @jake8074
    @jake8074 2 года назад +12

    At fifty-two... I can tell you that if this is a dream of yours don`t let an injury or ANYTHING else stop you! Not giving it another try after getting hurt right out of the gate has haunted me EVRY SINGLE DAY OF MY ADULT LIFE! No pity party here, just advice from an old fart who still dreams and yearns for what could`ve... what should have been. My very best to any and all that have either served our country, and to those who aspire to! Get after it!

  • @dalekallio902
    @dalekallio902 Год назад +2

    I love it when the guy that is right is invited back. Makes too much sense to do it.

  • @michaelvazquez3492
    @michaelvazquez3492 2 года назад +3

    I served for two years in Fort Lewis (now JLMB)--NOT in 2/75...and it is one of the best places to serve in the Army.

  • @Rico11b
    @Rico11b 2 года назад +5

    Support guys are awesome. You can't win a war without them. I never talked shit or fucked with support guys. Just cause they weren't Infantry doesn't mean that they aren't contributing to the cause. I'll put up a well trained Infantry Rifle Company against a small team any day. It's the Infantry Rifle Companies that take over countries and win wars. Take 82nd ABN Div and 101st for example. They are comprised of lots of Infantry Rifle Companies, and they can kick the shit out of anything that moves. Hell it can even be a "dirty leg" Infantry unit, they still kick some major ass too.

    • @servaaslabs
      @servaaslabs 2 года назад +2

      it's a great point.. I think it's a huge misconception that if you aren't in a tier 1 or "high speed" infantry unit that it must be really cushy and easy. I spent two years in a mech unit and we ran 5-8 miles three times a week or more and regularly rucked up for 20-25 mile road marches .. and our field exercises were no sleep high intensity.. some may read what I just wrote and scoff but being a grunt in the US Army isn't an easy job anywhere. They run you like hell.

    • @slmjake
      @slmjake 2 года назад +3

      Love your guys comments! I snuck into Ranger School as a dirty nasty leg and a log guy on top of that! Spent jump night guarding weapons and no pre jump rest then I led the leg company on a long road March to the drop zone to get them oriented and hand over the company lead position to the next guy in the bull pen. I laugh looking back at it all! Boy did they pile on the crap with us. I tolerated the Ranger Instructors giving me crap but when a fellow Ranget student and USMA grad called me a nasty leg and told me to carry his crap he and a couple ofnother students went down like bowling pins when I knocked their asses out.

    • @mattpage2228
      @mattpage2228 Год назад

      Look up JRTC rotation 3-99 in call. I think it was the third rotation..I was TL in the town house mentioned. steamrolled em.

  • @bladez4200
    @bladez4200 2 года назад +67

    Wow SF is crazy how you can make it to a elite unit just to be a support guy , this guy had to put up with abuse by the 11bravo guys and also had to relieve there needs he was probably hazed badly . I’m glad he made it to delta to show them who the man was .

    • @harveysanchez6993
      @harveysanchez6993 2 года назад +16

      Probably not hazed but probably just not seen as an idol or adequate for special operation combat for the team. And wasn't SF but a ranger in ranger battalion.

    • @ArmorOfZeus
      @ArmorOfZeus 2 года назад +11

      Support guys are most certainly hazed. Everyone gets hazed in Battalion.

    • @somethinganything4864
      @somethinganything4864 2 года назад +10

      @@harveysanchez6993 batt boys are known to haze quite a bit

    • @harveysanchez6993
      @harveysanchez6993 2 года назад +7

      @@somethinganything4864 well hazing was done a lot but for fun as I have heard that it was a rite of passage and to build stronger team bonds as well as to check guys when they get out of play not just to bully someone because they don’t like them.

    • @arighteousname5882
      @arighteousname5882 2 года назад +14

      In the regiment you're treated like hammered dog shit (hazed) until you get your ranger tab.

  • @DonnyBrook762
    @DonnyBrook762 2 года назад +8

    Great video, this gives hope to all my 92Gs in Battalion.

  • @cej3940
    @cej3940 Год назад +1

    There is nothing more I want to do more in life than to work in the ISA/Gray Fox
    I'd learn any languages they ask of me, do any high endurance physical feat they want me to do, compete to go to any hypercompetitive school needed to make me a good candidate
    Even if I could meet one of those operators and get to really talk to them, I could probably die pretty happy

  • @dow168
    @dow168 2 года назад +10

    Love these shows. But is it not possible get good quality audio going? Sometimes it is impossibly bad.

  • @zibabird
    @zibabird 2 года назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @neelonghunglow
    @neelonghunglow 2 года назад +16

    The eastern half of Washington state is a dessert. A large portion of it looks very similar to Afghanistan. Thank you all for your service.

    • @ApexSpectator36
      @ApexSpectator36 2 года назад +27

      What type of dessert? Lemon meringue 🍋, strawberry cheesecake🍓maybe even èclairs?

    • @roofer3608
      @roofer3608 2 года назад +6

      @@ApexSpectator36 grammer nazi's are such dorks

    • @LRRPFco52
      @LRRPFco52 2 года назад +17

      @@roofer3608 You have to make it through the spelling Nazis before you can graduate to grammar Nazis.

    • @tommyranger1
      @tommyranger1 2 года назад +18

      When I arrived at the 2d Ranger Bn, I was told don't concern yourself with the weather. If you can see Mt Rainier first thing in the morning, it's going to rain. If you can't see Mt Rainier, don't worry about it, it's already raining.

    • @ApexSpectator36
      @ApexSpectator36 2 года назад +2

      @@roofer3608 it's a joke, not a d*ck...

  • @v.german11b
    @v.german11b 2 года назад +3

    Amazing 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @NStephenson2022
    @NStephenson2022 Год назад +1

    Going to RASP Jan 13th, can’t wait to suck!

  • @phoenixknight8837
    @phoenixknight8837 2 года назад +3

    This channel has been aceing it!

  • @ColKurtzknew
    @ColKurtzknew Год назад

    Support specialists at the Unit have their own Selections and then go through the OTC. Very interesting.

    • @vitigaymer1053
      @vitigaymer1053 Год назад

      They don't go through same OTC as Assaulters. Jamey went through WV Selection and OTC to become Asssaulter.
      Only Operators go through OTC. Not Support Guys.

    • @G4x5da
      @G4x5da Год назад

      ⁠​⁠@@vitigaymer1053e literally said support guys get a slot in OTC with all the operators of selection

  • @wizzardofpaws2420
    @wizzardofpaws2420 2 года назад +1

    Wow 14 yrs in the unit

  • @vutran3758
    @vutran3758 2 года назад +8

    What about Ranger to RRC?

    • @G4x5da
      @G4x5da Год назад

      What about it?

  • @gregsayshello9576
    @gregsayshello9576 2 года назад +3

    I’m 25 series. You’d probably have to at least kill me for me not to try and go to selection.

  • @TobiA0000
    @TobiA0000 2 года назад +1

    Amazing. What was his original MOS?

  • @georgewashington938
    @georgewashington938 11 месяцев назад

    "injured" is frequently mentioned in the different special ops selections. what does that mean? It would be nice to hear more about the injuries that get in people's way to completion. I assume the common injuries are things like tendonitis and ligament sprains or a significant bruise to a key muscle. Is there a pattern to these injuries and are there specific preparation exercise someone can do in addition to the obvious strength and endurance work.

  • @adamgamba6673
    @adamgamba6673 2 года назад +6

    how is delta different from the sas?

    • @d.wesleydinkins917
      @d.wesleydinkins917 2 года назад +8

      how bout there from different countries across the Atlantic Ocean

    • @anthonyberardinelli8767
      @anthonyberardinelli8767 2 года назад +3

      They are pretty similar actually because delta was formed on the principles of SAS. US Green beret Charles Beckwith back in 70s did a few tours with SAS guys and when he returned back to his platoon, he brought the idea to our military about having a agressive counter terror unit and that's how delta force was formed in 1978

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 2 года назад +3

      Better funding tbh, SAS was a little behind this century I heard from some interviews of SAS guys and delta guys but now it seems the SAS also got some very nice kit and they're rather similar to delta now

    • @bigg4089
      @bigg4089 2 года назад +8

      They drink less tea in Delta

    • @VM-yt2fj
      @VM-yt2fj 2 года назад +1

      The funding and training making a huge difference. You are talking about the world largest economy funding about 1500 peoples of CAG and 1500 peoples from DEVGRU. And they are the best U.S ground units out there. DEVGRU for naval operations for sure. And we are not even talking about the population ratio plays a huge factor there. The SAS are definitely top notch. However, if you looking into the IQ distributions from the developed country perspective. You have a much bigger population here in the state compared to the Britishes. So, you actually have a greater chance to make smarter people be borned in the U.S. Just like picking 1500 people out of a 325millions base number. You have 0.00046154% of chance being selected. That roughly equals 1 out of 216,666 people. This is like only one dude got picked in the average mid-size city. If it's in UK, it's gonna be 800 SAS members out of 67.22 millions population, which rounds out about 0.00119012%. This is like picking 1 person out of 84025 people. It's like a small city mayor. Which means U.S is having 2.5785 times more difficulty to pick on a individual to such unit than in UK if it's based on the statistics here. Not talking about the IQ factorials reflection toward larger base number here as mentioned, and the actual training budget+R&D. 🤑 (Plus, opportunity to goes on different missions, world rare mission makes even better experience.) That's why Delta > SAS.

  • @robertdewit7444
    @robertdewit7444 2 года назад +4

    Algorithm candy

  • @michealsealy1908
    @michealsealy1908 2 года назад +21

    You guys should interview Sean Rogers former SF 10th Group law enforcement and author and has a RUclips channel and a company called FNG ( fucking new guy ).

    • @Thebluesky0311
      @Thebluesky0311 2 года назад +16

      he has done plenty of interviews and there all similar because of his short career, while there tons of another SOF guys who would be better to get their stories out in the open.

    • @arighteousname5882
      @arighteousname5882 2 года назад +1

      @@Thebluesky0311 I concur

  • @Reaper7Podcast
    @Reaper7Podcast 2 года назад +2

    Never heard anyone use I,I,I,I…Damn Top, I was a Ranger too,but Geez don’t you think you should recognize more people than when you were a E-7???

  • @haroldverdecia5490
    @haroldverdecia5490 Год назад +1

    The unit!! Uhhhh

  • @4oh63
    @4oh63 2 года назад +1

    All of the audio cutting in an out, have you guys never heard of Discord?

  • @wesdavis6942
    @wesdavis6942 2 года назад +1

    i know him!

  • @MikeHunt-rw4gf
    @MikeHunt-rw4gf 2 года назад +8

    Algorithm.

  • @daves679
    @daves679 2 года назад +6

    I can see tha look in Dave & Jacks eyes........shoulda went.....

  • @thomasboston1887
    @thomasboston1887 Год назад

    WHO RAH FOR SIGNAL CORPS 72 E FORT GORDON A-3-1 AGUSTA

  • @theblackjfk8190
    @theblackjfk8190 10 месяцев назад

    1st Batt best batt lol

  • @jayklink851
    @jayklink851 2 года назад +2

    👍👍👍👏

  • @Forged407
    @Forged407 2 года назад

    Hi

  • @travelinman482
    @travelinman482 2 года назад +3

    A squadron? Isn’t that Air Force jargon? Never heard that word used in the Army. Always heard “squad”.

    • @SGobuck
      @SGobuck 2 года назад +3

      Cav has been using it forever.

    • @juniortemong7856
      @juniortemong7856 2 года назад +3

      So does SOF units

    • @G4x5da
      @G4x5da Год назад

      @@juniortemong7856only in JSOC. It started with Delta using British nomenclature - as a hommage to the SAS. Other units within JSOC also accepted this (eventually NSWDG too). All non-JSOC SOF (except AFSOC) use companies/bataljons etc.

  • @sbragan5lg76i
    @sbragan5lg76i 2 года назад +6

    You hear so many stories about non combat mos's getting shit on and then wonder why goat farmers keep kicking your asses.

  • @acontemplative1
    @acontemplative1 2 года назад +1

    Algorithm bump

  • @Civiczz_
    @Civiczz_ 2 года назад +2

    what is The Unit?

    • @stephencao2903
      @stephencao2903 2 года назад +4

      Delta Force

    • @SethBeck
      @SethBeck 2 года назад +5

      CAG

    • @rp4712
      @rp4712 2 года назад +4

      Delta Force - Combat Applications Group (CAG) - 1st SFOD . One of two of the US military’s top Counter Terrorism/ Direct Action Special Missions Unit

    • @jimmykalal825
      @jimmykalal825 2 года назад +1

      @@rp4712 is the other DEVGRU?

    • @rp4712
      @rp4712 2 года назад +2

      @@jimmykalal825 yeah

  • @roy6254
    @roy6254 2 года назад +2

    Just like trump said he would fight for the USA like the past 🤣😂