 I'm switching over to my operational brief. Can you return fire, battle buddy? Can you apply self-aid? No. I'm under sporadic small arms fire. If you witness a teammate in the open, receive a gunshot wound to their left leg. Your teammate is struggling to reach his or her combat. Yep. Contact. Contact. Contact. Contact. Wait for the enemy to charge the meters. So it's a chest. Get a serial or something like that for 15 seconds. Three, two, one, go. Around the neck. Plus the groin area. Plus we turn it across the tourniquet. You don't have to over tighten the tourniquet. Secure it with a tab. Checking. Can you tell me what happened? I'm Sergeant Jake Phillips. I'm representing 3rd Ranger Battalion. And the United States Army Special Operations Command. And I'm with Team 9. I represent USISOC, the United States Army Special Operations Command. Personally, I think that the CPR lane is the hardest just because it's extremely procedurally driven. And all the steps have to be performed in sequence or else you're in no go. Medical is a huge part of what we do as soldiers, especially as infantrymen and as rangers. Being able to do first aid and then take care of each other while we're on the battlefield shows that something happened is a huge part of maintaining the force and being combat effective. Absolutely. I think Team 9 has everything and its potential to win this competition and best represent the Army as the United States Army's best squad. My name is Private First Class David Doucette. I'm in 2CR and I'm on Team 7. So far out of all the lanes, you might want to say CPR because there's just a lot of steps to it. But as long as you take the time and you just pay attention to the lane, then you shouldn't have any issues going through it. Overcoming is just reps, repetition. Don't go up there if you're not ready. You need to take the time. You need to watch people doing it. You need to watch how they're... Like every little step, you can't skip anything otherwise you'll end up failing. Medical, in my opinion, is the number one tactic, I guess, that you need to know as any soldier because one day you might be put in that situation where you have to save somebody's life and you have to be prepared to do so. Of course, absolutely. We train for this nonstop. We do nothing but train for this and we've been ready for this competition for months now.