Hit me up if you are interested.
Forget the research. I got it. More to follow later.Aggie118 said:
I'd love to hear your advice and tips on that. Also for a new LT headed to their unit in a few months. Thanks!
I wonder if higher up said no sports for PT. It's a shame. Flag football was fun and it was great cardio. The team that got scored on had to do 20 pushups or situps and they did them fast because they wanted to continue playing.JABQ04 said:
We used to have unit bake sales on Mondays during command maintenance while I was stationed at JBLM. We were locked in anyways doing PMCS and they stopped letting us do shoppette runs, so the batteries selling cookies, snacks and Monsters was a good way to raise money for units.
For some reason every unit I was in forbid playing sports for PT. Flag football or ultimate frisbee is good cardio, fun, and the competitiveness gets folks into it. Just were never allowed to play. Company/Battery runs as motivation quickly lose the desired effect of raising morale every Friday. We did have a "rebel" 1SG who would run us to an out of the way field when I was at Polk and we'd play football once in a blue moon but for the most part PT sessions were monotonous and predictable.
Out APFT average was around 260, so I don't think sports hurt us.ArmyTanker said:I wonder if higher up said no sports for PT. It's a shame. Flag football was fun and it was great cardio. The team that got scored on had to do 20 pushups or situps and they did them fast because they wanted to continue playing.JABQ04 said:
We used to have unit bake sales on Mondays during command maintenance while I was stationed at JBLM. We were locked in anyways doing PMCS and they stopped letting us do shoppette runs, so the batteries selling cookies, snacks and Monsters was a good way to raise money for units.
For some reason every unit I was in forbid playing sports for PT. Flag football or ultimate frisbee is good cardio, fun, and the competitiveness gets folks into it. Just were never allowed to play. Company/Battery runs as motivation quickly lose the desired effect of raising morale every Friday. We did have a "rebel" 1SG who would run us to an out of the way field when I was at Polk and we'd play football once in a blue moon but for the most part PT sessions were monotonous and predictable.
Sport related injuries reducing readiness/effectiveness or whatever the official term for unit status that I am looking for.JABQ04 said:
Yes it was brigade policy (I believe) to not do sports for PT. Just made PT lame and repetitive.