“The New Breed” - Vintage Cap ** Use the Contact Us feature on Website to get your OPS Initials on the Hat **
Money back within 30 days for an exchange.
DON'T ORDER THE HAT AND THEN COMPLAIN YOUR INITIALS AREN'T ON THE HAT
“The New Breed” represents the shift to a harder standard where Pararescue and Combat Control candidates trained side by side, forging joint respect through shared suffering. The goal wasn’t throughput. It was simple: Quality, not Quantity. That standard took root with the first combined Indoc. class in 1988, and it still holds.
STS, Inc. is bringing back the old-school designs that meant something. Trademarked and unapologetic.
Everybody knows that dad caps are no longer just for dads, so get an embroidered cotton twill cap for yourself! This one's really special thanks to the intricate embroidery detail and the washed out vintage feel.
• 100% cotton twill
• 6-panel unstructured cap with a low profile
• 6 sewn eyelets
• Black sweatband
• Metal snap buckle with an antique brass finish
• Washed-out vintage effect
• Blank product sourced from China
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
Size guide
| A (inches) | B (inches) | C (inches) | D (inches) | |
| One size | 18 ½-23 ¼ | 4 ⅜ | 2 ⅞ | 7 ⅛ |
CCT History
Combat Control Teams (CCT) were established in 1953 to provide air traffic control and command-and-control capabilities in support of U.S. and allied special operations. Evolving from WWII pathfinders and glider operations, CCTs became essential for establishing drop zones, landing zones, and assault strips in denied or austere environments. Over the decades, they’ve deployed alongside every U.S. SOF element, enabling precision airpower in conflicts from Southeast Asia to the Middle East. CCTs are uniquely qualified as FAA-certified air traffic controllers and hold a wide array of advanced skills: they are certified Joint Terminal Attack Controllers (JTACs), combat divers, static-line and military free-fall parachutists (HALO/HAHO), qualified in demolitions, small unit tactics, survival/evasion/resistance/escape (SERE), communications, fire support coordination, and reconnaissance. Their ability to integrate air and ground operations under extreme conditions makes them one of the most versatile and mission-critical assets in U.S. special operations.