Military pentathlon

The Military Pentathlon is a multisport.

History of the Military Pentathlon

The modern pentathlon was originally designed to include the ideal skills of a soldier of the time. By the Second World War, some of those skills (fencing and horse riding) were irrelevant to the modern soldier.

In 1946 a French officer, Captain Henri Debrus (later promoted Colonel and President of the Conseil International du Sport Militaire (CISM)) conceived the idea of organising a sports competition reserved exclusively for the army. It was during discussions held at Frankfurt am Main which led to the setting up of the Allied Forces Sports Council, that his attention was drawn to an original military physical training technique used, at that time, by the Netherlands airborne units. After being dropped over a given zone, parachutists had to travel a distance of twenty kilometres from the dropping point, crossing over a number of obstacles and performing combat operations (small arms fire and grenade throwing).

Captain Debrus took the Dutch method as a guide, eliminated the parachute jump and modified the other tests in order to form a system, which he thought, would constitute an ideal way of ground training. A first trial competition organised by himself was held at the Military Physical Training Centre, at Freiburg, in the French occupation zone in Germany, in August 1947. Only Belgian, Dutch, and French teams took part in the competition.

Since 1950 annual world championships have been held. The sport has grown in popularity, and now over 30 countries participate. The sport's governing body, the CISM, now also organise pentathlons aimed at naval and air force personnel.

Events of the military pentathlon

Shooting

The shooting discipline consists of sighting shots and competition shooting. The competition shooting consists of:

If electronic scoring systems are not used, the time available is 12 minutes. After the announcement of "15 seconds remain" the signals "start" and "stop" are given by short whistle blasts. The precision fire is started at the same time for all shooters participating in the same heat.

The rapid fire is started in two rounds (every second shooter, first the uneven numbers followed by the even numbers) in the same heat. Competitors in the non-shooting round must remain absolutely still.

Tracer, armour-piercing and incendiary ammunition are prohibited. Weapons and ammunition must be provided by the team.

Obstacle Run

The length of the course is 500 meters and consists of 20 standardised obstacles.

  1. Rope ladder
  2. Double beam
  3. Trip wire
  4. Network of wire
  5. Ford
  6. Espalier
  7. Balance beam
  8. Sloping wall with rope
  9. Horizontal beams
  10. Irish table
  11. Tunnel and twin beams
  12. Four steps of beams
  13. Banquette and pit
  14. Assault wall
  15. Pit
  16. Vertical ladder
  17. Assault wall II
  18. Zigzag balance beam
  19. Chicane
  20. Three assault walls in succession

Obstacle swimming

50 meters with four obstacles[1]

Throwing

The weight of grenades is 600 grams (±1.33 pounds) for men and 400 grams (±0.88 pound) for women.

Throwing consists of precision throwing at distances of 20, 25, 30 and 35 meters (five meters shorter for each target for females). The targets consist of an inner circle with radius of one meter, and an outer circle with radius of two meters. The time allotted for precision throwing is three minutes, 16 grenades with four grenades on each target.

Distance throwing is also included, where competitors throw three grenades in two minutes. Only the longest throw will count toward the score, which combines points for both distance and precision.

Cross-country Running

The cross-country portion is run last, and for men is 8000m.[2]

References

See also