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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Command Sgt. Maj. Sheryl D. Lyon, the U.S. Army Europe Command senior enlisted leader, pins the U.S. Army Europe EFMB on Lance Cpl. Dennis Engelund of the Danish army's 2nd Medical Coy. Engelund is one of two Danish Soldiers who...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Command Sgt. Major Sheryl D. Lyon, the U.S. Army Europe Command senior enlisted leader, delivers remarks at the U.S. Army Europe Expert Field Medical Badge official awards ceremony held March 24 in Baumholder. (U.S. Army photo b...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Brig. Gen. James J. Mingus, the 4th Infantry Division and Fort Carson deputy commanding general, takes a moment to meet with the 23 candidates who earned their U.S. Army Europe Expert Field Medical Badge before the official awar...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Staff Sgt. Francisco Torres of the 2nd Calvary Regiment races toward the finish line to complete the 12-mile ruck march in under three hours - the last requirement to earn the U.S. Army Europe Expert Field Medical Badge - March ...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Spc. Matthew Contreras of the 421st Medical Battalion (Multifunctional), 30th Medical Brigade, is congratulated by his peers after crossing the finish line, completing the 12-mile ruck march under three hours - the last requirem...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Spc. Marco Fonseca of the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team finishes the 12-mile ruck march first among the 28 candidates, crossing the finish line after 2 hours, 23 minutes, during the U.S. Army Europe Expert Field Medical Bad...
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LAGER AULENBACH, Germany - Lance Cpl. Dennis Engelund of the Danish army's 2nd Medical Coy, makes it to the 6-mile mark - the halfway point of the ruck march - March 24 at Lager Aulenbach. The march was the final task for candidates seeking to earn t...
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LAGER AULENBACH, Germany - Candidates line up for the final U.S. Army Europe EFMB event - a 12-mile ruck march which must be completed in under three hours - March 24 at Lager Aulenbach. The EFMB event started with 193 U.S. and NATO competitors. Cand...
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LAGER AULENBACH, Germany - Col. William Stubbs, 30th Medical Brigade commander, cheers on a Sgt. 1st Class Jorge Barzola of the 212th Combat Support Hospital at the 6-mile mark - the halfway point of the final task for candidates seeking to earn thei...
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BAUMHOLDER, Germany - Twenty-three allied candidates earned the prestigious Expert Field Medical Badge after a week of grueling testing conducted by U.S. Army Europe and 421st Medical Battalion (Multifunctional) personnel March 24 in Baumholder.
Candidates who earned the badge came from the 21st Theater Sustainment Command's 21st Special Troops Battalion, 16th Sustainment Brigade, 30th Medical Brigade and 18th Military Brigade, as well as the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, 173rd Airborne Brigade, 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, Regional Health Command - Europe, 2nd Calvary Regiment and the Danish army's 2nd Medical Coy. The spring 2016 EFMB event began "standardization week" with 193 candidates. After four days of rigorous testing, 28 candidates stepped off the starting line of the 12-mile ruck march. Twenty-three candidates crossed the finish line in time to earn their badge.
Command Sgt. Major Sheryl D. Lyon, the U.S. Army Europe senior enlisted leader, thanked the cadre who supported the EFMB and praised the candidates for their hard work and achievements during an awards ceremony held after the last event.
"Each and every one of you are winners," she said.
Special recognition went to several candidates for their unique achievements. Capt. Diana Rommelfanger of LRMC scored 95 percent on the written test - the highest overall score among the 193 candidates. Pfc. Ralph Fontanez or the 173rd ABCT received the most "GO's" in the competition, exceeding the standard for required tasks per combat testing lane among his peers.
Spc. Marco Fonseca of the 173rd ABN BDE was recognized not only for earning the prestigious badge but for being the first among the 28 candidates to cross the finish line after completing the required 12-mile ruck march with a time of 2 hours, 23 minutes.
Fonseca attributes his success largely to the support of a strong senior medic. He recommended future EFMB candidates also enlist a strong mentor.
"Study, study, study, and don't quit," said Fonseca, offering additional advice for aspiring EFMB candidates.
Soldiers and Family members came to hold up encouraging signs, cheer and even pace their EFMB candidate during the culminating march. Others followed through the event via various social media platforms, such as Snapchat, Instagram, and Facebook. Organization communicators featured highlights of the ruck march and the awards ceremony in their products, allowing Soldiers, Family members, and the candidates' units to follow the action as it occurred.
Candidates who participated received training not normally part of their country's military training during "standardization." Each NATO candidate who earns the EFMB becomes a subject matter expert available to their country's military to help prepare the next batch of candidates for success.
Competition officials said they conduct the USAREUR EFMB biannually. Allies are cordially invited to participate, they added.
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