During the Indian Relay practice, the Indian riding the horse seems to have also switched his socks while switching horses. But a last look at him racing in the distance shows the green sock back where it began.
During the Indian Relay practice the track goes from muddy to dry and fast thru several sequences.
Despite being slammed into a glass top table, breaking it, Kayce Dutton is shown with no glass or wood on his back when he gets from the floor.
Dan is taught how to fire a pistol using the "teacup hold", no self respecting former special forces bodyguard would ever teach his employer that hold as it reduces accuracy.
While telling his father the story of the high value target Kayce and his SEAL team took out in Pakistan, he claim that the target killed his "weapons Sergeant." Sergeant is a rank that does not exist in the Navy, thus SEAL teams do not have "weapons Sergeants." No SEAL would make this mistake.
Dan Jenkin's former spec ops bodyguard not only shows his client how to fire a handgun using the incorrect "teacup style" (the offhand supporting the firearm underneath the magazine instead aligned with the frame) he fires his own weapon in that same manner.
A special forces operator would never fire a weapon in that manner as it risks either missing a target or poorly placed shot.
A special forces operator would never fire a weapon in that manner as it risks either missing a target or poorly placed shot.
Dan Jenkin's former special ops bodyguard walks up to Kayce Dutton close enough for Kayce to grab his weapon and using a judo disarming move on him. A real spec ops operator wouldn't have gotten close enough for this to have occurred.