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This episode tells the forgotten true story of Corporal James “Jimmy” Kelleher—an ordinary Boston dock worker and pool-hall prodigy who quietly rewrote sniper doctrine in World War II. In March 1944, the Allied advance in the Rapido River valley was being destroyed by a single German observation bunker known as Strongpoint Seven. Three snipers and fourteen infantrymen died trying to neutralize it. Kelleher spent six days studying the bunker and identified a structural beam gap invisible to standard doctrine. Using geometry he learned from pool-hall ricochet shots, he calculated an indirect, deflected rifle trajectory and fired a single round through a three-inch gap from 480 yards. The shot killed the German observer instantly and opened the valley for Allied movement. His “beam-gap deflection” technique spread through Italy, North Africa, and later Normandy, credited with neutralizing more than 120 fortified positions and saving an estimated 380 lives. Kelleher’s name never appeared in any official report, yet his method became foundational to modern sniper training. This is the story of quiet innovation, impossible odds, and the soldier who solved a battlefield problem nobody else could.