Throwing of an SAS Soldier ???

B.s. meters went off in my head too ! Yet when a man enters a room & has a 'presence' about him, one can only wonder. It's not like this guy was a teen idolising Mall Ninja's. This was a gent 43 years of age( approx ) taking a automotive tech course.

B.S. is B.S. & perhaps this gent was off the turnip truck, yet the question in my origninal thread was... could anyone else do this.

Perhaps the two wise asses that think I made this thread up could throw like this gent.

I would pay money to see this.

Kobun Out

P.S. In fact if this gent was not part of the SAS, which he probably wasn't. It scares me to think of what would happen if a true SAS guy meet the gent, & he went off like he was part of the unit... WOW.
 
Kevin Davey said:
SAS recruit from within the military (UK and Commonwealth) and not at civilian level.

A serving SAS member would not let his identity be made public.In fact any publicity of the unit is seriously frowned upon...The MOD and UK government have also tried to prevent ex members publishing books about their unit experiences ...Current members now take an oath not to reveal or publish accounts of their service even after retirement, .....so dont expect to hear anything of the regiments operations in todays theatre as has been written in the past about Gulf War 1.

Formed and active since WW2, very little was known about them until the Embassy seige in London back in 1980.

I think that 'his' SAS scout student story is untrue....though I am not dismissing your account of what you were told (or saw)....He may be someone very skilled, maybe he has some form of military background, but the SAS bit is fictitious.

All spot on Kevin.

Mr Ghost. Ask him four questions:

What is special about the clock in the sargents mess?

Who uses the sargents mess?

Where are the SAS barracks located?

Ask him the last time he went to an SAS dinner?

I thought of a 5th. Ask what the walls are made of in the 'Killing Room'?

I'll only give you one clue. If he says Hereford, he isn't.

I used to have a 62 year old customer in the pub that used to wear a brass SAS badge on the lapel of his blazer or jacket. He said he was, but he definitely wasn't. He told so much BS, in the end he had to leave the village as we think he was getting embarrassed!

Throwing any object just takes practise.

how do you join the SAS?

You apply from within the forces unit you are already with. You pass the tests and you are in. Few make it or feel they want to continue.
 
Back to the question, How many could consistantly stick beer cap at 30ft.?

Not many.

Practice makes perfect and I am sure all of us would love to have skill like that. I would have to see it to believe it. Anyone have any data on knife throwing tournament scores or official Guiness World book records?
 
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