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Twenty-five men and women, including an ex-SAS operator working as a mole, face an intense start to the latest SAS: Who Dares Wins course, led by Chief Instructor Ant Middleton
The last six recruits face deep interrogation and a day of sickeners, including 'drownproofing' - simulated drowning. Only the physically and mentally elite will make it through.
The recruits are stalked across the Scottish Highlands by a military-trained hunter force, before facing extreme interrogation on limited sleep and rations. Who will crack?
The recruits' grit is tested as Jay's undercover status is revealed and he launches a brutal beasting to expose the weakest in the group
The recruits take on the intense close-combat murderball and surf immersion - a notorious water beasting that simulates water torture
The recruits are pushed to control their aggression, as they're trained with guns and take part in hand-to-hand combat, in an episode exploring loss, loyalty and self-control
Led by Ant Middleton, 25 men and women - including an ex-SAS operator working as a mole - face the latest intense course, beginning with a swim to a remote Scottish island
It's the toughest course ever as 21 recruits head for the wilds of Scotland and a recreation of the SAS selection process
Twenty-five men and women, including an ex-SAS operator working as a mole, face an intense start to the latest SAS: Who Dares Wins course, led by Chief Instructor Ant Middleton
In 2019, SAS selection opens to women for the first time. Meanwhile, this series of SAS: Who Dares Wins takes 25 men and women to the Andes to see if they have what it takes to make it in the SAS.
Ant and the DS intensify the course, as 25 new recruits face the ultimate physical and psychological test, in Morocco's unforgiving Atlas Mountains
Twenty five new recruits' resilience and character are tested deep in the Amazon rainforest, in a unique version of SAS Selection
Ex-Special Forces soldiers put 30 men through the ultimate test of psychological resilience and character, in order to answer the all-important question: 'would I want this man beside me in a crisis?'