DECATUR — It was a perfect day for a round of disc golf Jan. 31, so Coach Dayton Shaw pulled three new portable disc golf goals out of storage and set them up around the football/soccer field at Bulldog Stadium in Decatur.
Shaw, who is the head boys’ basketball coach and physical education teacher, had taught his fifth-, sixth- and middle-school classes the art of launching and catching a flying disc since the start of the school year.
Shaw, an avid disc golf player, wanted to get his students away from tablets, cellphones and other distractions and get them more physically active as part of the school’s physical fitness program.
The students first learned to throw on the original 12.25-inch Wham-O Frisbee disc which weighed in at between 8 and 10 ounces. Once the students mastered the larger disc, it was on to the small and lighter ultimate disc which is 10 inches and weighs in at 6.2 ounces. Shaw’s students would soon take to throwing these discs whenever they got a chance, either in the gyms when the weather was bad or outdoors when the weather was sunny.
Sometime around the late 1870s, in the town of Warren, Conn., a baker by the name of William Frisbie (original spelling) sold homemade pies in and around Connecticut. Frisbie packed his delights in a light tin baking pan with the name of his company, “Frisbie Pie Company” stamped on the bottom of it. Soon his pies became popular treats with the students at Yale University in New Haven, Conn. One problem with the tins was what to do with them once the pies were gone.
In the 1940s, some of the Yale students found an ingenious use for the leftover pie tins. They turned the pans upside down and began throwing and catching them all the while shouting “Frisbie” as the pans sailed through the air — thus the birth of the popular flying disc.
Today there is a growing movement around the country involving the discs and a metal-chain-clad goal.
There are three basic discs used in the sport. There is a driver disc used for long-distance shots, a mid-range disc used for mid-to-short-range shots, and a putter disc used for shots into the goal.
There are two basic types of disc golf courses, a nine-hole and an 18-hole. Decatur’s Veterans Park includes a nine-hole course that boasts one of the longest holes in the country, and the Old Town Park in Gravette is one of the most challenging in the area. Gentry also has a disc course.
In mid-January, the Decatur School District purchased a complete nine-hole Frisbee golf course complete with goals, several complete disc sets and bags. Current plans are to design and build a nine-hole course around the middle and high school and behind Bulldog Stadium. A completion date has not been set.
Westside Eagle Observer/MIKE ECKELS Ruby Frye (center) launches her driver disc at a temporary Frisbee Golf goal about 40 yards away during the Decatur Middle School physical education class’s Frisbee Golf afternoon at Bulldog Stadium in Decatur Jan. 31. Once spring makes is appearance in six weeks, a permanent nine hole Frisbee Golf Course will be erected at the school
Ricky Wysocki doesn’t sweat. Instead, passion oozes from every pore.
On first impression, he’s like a robusta bean, his rat-a-tat words flowing quicker than comprehension. His cadence comes from an inner confidence that suggests he knows exactly where he’s headed.
Better yet, the excitement in his voice is so palpable that if he sold lint for a living, no one would bet against Wysocki becoming the best darn lint salesperson in the world.
But why settle for lint when perhaps being the best disc golf player has a better ring to it?
In a meteoric career on the Disc Golf Pro Tour that has paralleled the sport’s popularity, the sinewy 6-foot-4-inch Wysocki dominated 2021 en route to leading in wins, points and being named the Professional Disc Golf Association (PDGA) Player of the Year for the fourth time.
“I think after last year, I am,” says the two-time PDGA world champion when asked if he’s the best player in the sport. “There are obviously players who are great, but in 2021 I won every award there was and I was also the most consistent player out there.”
Although current world champion James Conrad might take umbrage, know this: Wysocki’s words weren’t spoken with arrogance at the wheel.
In an era when athletes fish in a sea of cliches, there was refreshing earnestness mixed with a bit of innocence. There’s little doubt his successes in the Tour’s Mixed Pro Open division at 28-years-old has him positioned to remain as an upper echelon player, but sticking that legacy flag in disc golf’s historical ground is what matters most.
Dynamic Discs, founded in 2005, is also banking on him. On January 4, Wysocki, who turned professional in 2010 and promptly won PDGA Rookie of the Year honors in 2011, signed a $4 million endorsement deal with the company that could prove to be more lucrative in the long run. The payout matched Paul McBeth’s $1 million average annual contract as the biggest in disc golf history.
“His contract is $1 million a year and it’s guaranteed,” says Dynamic Discs team director Eric McCabe, the 2010 PDGA world champion and, incidentally, the company’s first sponsored athlete. “It could be more than that because depending how many discs we sell with his name on it, it could be $2 million.”
Says Dynamic Discs founder and CEO Jeremy Rusco: “I never thought in this short of time we’d have a million-dollar athlete throwing and representing Dynamic Discs. For us it’s really exciting — and for Ricky — and for the future of the sport.”
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Additionally, the deal included an extra $250,000 signing bonus paid in bitcoin. Crypto payments are a growing trend among some professional athletes. The NFL’s Saquon Barkley, Odell Beckham Jr., Trevor Lawrence, Russell Okung and Aaron Rodgers have packaged endorsement deals in crypto or leveraged it into contracts.
“For one, I’ve done a lot of research and feel confident, in my opinion, it will be the next generation currency,” says Wysocki, who makes his home in Scottsdale, Ariz. “It’s a long-term hold. In five to 10 years I think it will be worth quite a bit. Plus, in disc golf there is a crossover with crypto.”
Before the crypto deal, though, things got rather cryptic. At the end of 2019, Wysocki started “feeling off” and struggled. Fatigue followed him like a shadow. It was uncharted territory. He practiced, emphasizing shots and parts of his game that came easily. Self-doubt seeped in. Was he on the downside, he thought.
Little did he know, Lyme Disease had taken root. In hindsight, he said, it made sense since disc golfers compete on courses in wooded and bushy areas.
Then it got worse. In early 2020, Wysocki missed tournaments for the first time in his career.
“He went from being the top golfer in the world to barely being able to walk,” Rusco says.
For six months he battled the disease and then depression.
“From going from being a top-level pro athlete in my sport to getting Lyme Disease to barely being able to walk, and not knowing if I’m able to touch a disc at that level again, it was crazy to me,” Wysocki says.
It changed his mindset about health and wellness. After hiring a nutritionist, he said it was one of the best moves he ever made, pointing to his momentous 2021.
“I noticed I consistently had mental clarity and energy to play at the best of my abilities,” he says, adding that through blood, urine and saliva samples his nutrionist is able to set up his body for optimal performance with vitamins, supplements and diet.
There’s little argument the sport has experienced an upward trajectory. McCabe calls his era the pioneering times. Few players then made a salary, and only eight to 10 were traveling on tour full time. Today that number is closer to 50.
“The only time you were getting paid from a manufacturer was if you got your name on a disc. And the way you got your name on a disc is that you won a world title,” McCabe says.
Ken Climo, perhaps the most celebrated professional disc player, reeled off an unfathomable nine straight PDGA world titles in the 1990s and finished with 12. He earned $436,230.32 in career money. In 103 fewer events, Wysocki has already totaled $506,832.76.
Yet it’s not necessarily about the money. It comes back to legacy. Wysocki, a six-time major champion, wants to be everything he can be, from growing the game at a grass roots level through his Sockibomb Foundation to being an anti-Lyme Disease advocate, to becoming a legendary player in the same vein as Tom Brady.
For someone who became hooked on the sport circa 2004 while being home-schooled during his teenage years in Medina, Ohio, he’s gone places.
“It progressed from, ‘Hey, this is fun,’ and then it progressed to ‘I have a passion for this’ and ‘Hey, I’m good at this’ to ‘Hey, I’m going to dedicate my life to this’ to ‘Hey, I’m now the best player in the world for, who knows, how many years to come.'”
Disc golf, like golf, is multiple games in one. Play them separately.
February 15, 2022 by Steve Andrews in Instruction, Opinion with comments
One of the fascinating parts of football is that it is not one game. It is five games – or more – in one. The jobs of linemen, wide receivers, running backs, kickers, and quarterbacks are so distinct that they are essentially all playing different games simultaneously. Most linemen are not very concerned with running a 4.3 40-yard dash; kickers don’t worry about their arm strength. These overlapping games have become so specialized that, in professional football, the athletes are basically incompatible. In a pinch, you can put a third baseman into left field or have a forward play center in basketball, but you probably shouldn’t ask your punter to step in if your left tackle is injured.
There are also distinct games within traditional golf. Putting is so different from driving that it’s almost like playing two separate games. It’s like making the last frame in a game of bowling a round of darts. Ben Hogan, one of the best golfers of all time and an absolute technician of the long swing, thought putts should count less than a full stroke. There is not a single golf swing in traditional golf – there are at least five in every good player’s game. The full swing used for drives and most long irons shots is not like the putt, pitch, or chip. And the sand shot is nothing like any of the other swings – you open your stance, crank the clubface flat, and then focus on missing the ball. Hitting any other shot with the fundamentals used for a sand shot will end in absolute disaster.
This same approach can help your disc golf game. Many new players hurt themselves by thinking that most of their shots will be thrown with one basic swing. They won’t. For example, beginning players often put themselves at a huge disadvantage by trying to putt with what is essentially a shortened version of their full throw. While there are ways in which the putt and the throw are related, it is better to just accept that these are very different athletic moves trying to accomplish very different things. Thinking of the various shots in disc golf as requiring different setups and techniques – like the variety of shots in golf – can help you get better results.
Each part of the game needs attention to what those throws are trying to accomplish. And this may require purposefully doing things with one swing that are awful swing flaws in another. It is better to think of the various shots in disc golf, especially in the short game, as mini-games. You are often trying to do something very different from your standard throw, so these other swings demand specialized attention and practice. Just as you can’t get better at chipping by hitting drivers in traditional golf, it’s much harder to dial in your upshots if you throw them like drives.
Focus on the Setup
Disc golfers who have been playing a long time often make changes to their throw without much conscious thought. They know the flight they want and can feel what they need to do get there, often changing the nose angle or release mid-throw. That is a great skill but one that can’t easily be replicated by newer players.
One of the best ways to create these different flights is by changing your setup, putting yourself in a position to get the release angle you need. This is like how a traditional golfer changes their stance for a chipshot – narrowing their feet, putting the ball back in their stance, and moving their hands ahead of the ball – to set up a short descending blow that gives them the low flight they need. That is much easier than trying to manipulate the clubface mid-swing.
We can use this same insight to set our release angle, grip, stance, and foot position to set the flight we want. Setting these positions before you start also helps prevent confusing your mechanics. For example, it’s easier to make sure throwing your upshots nose up won’t affect throwing your drives nose down if the setup between the two throws is completely different. Use your practice time to develop an arsenal of different setups that all generate different flights.
Upshots and Approaches
One of the keys to throwing great drives is getting the nose of the disc down. It is one of the fundamentals of getting discs to stay in the air and fly on-line. Throwing nose up is one of the most common and frustrating swing flaws because a nose-up release makes the disc lose speed quickly, stall, and hyzer out. This kills distance.
But this “flawed” release is perfect for approaches and upshots. Throwing your approaches with your normal swing often produces shots that come in too hot and skip. This makes landing upshots on your target more difficult and requires perfectly calibrating how hard you throw the shot. Throwing your approaches and upshots nose up will keep them from flying too far past the basket and cause them to land softly.
You can use your setup to generate a nose-up flight that will always land softly. One of the best keys is to set up with your wrist above your elbow, which helps assure that the disc will come out nose up every time. In the video from 2014 below, Paul Ulibarri shows how this simple change in your setup can allow you to land shots softly. This gives you a wider margin for error in how hard you throw you upshots because you are taking a lot of the speed and glide out the disc, assuring that it will fly shorter and land softer.
This video is short, simple, and has probably saved me more strokes than the other ten thousand hours of instruction videos I have watched combined:
Getting it In and Keeping it Close
Many players find a putting style and stick to it – cycling through lots of reps to make sure that their form is dialed in and repeatable. That’s smart. If you have a putting stroke that is effective from lots of positions and distances, then don’t mess with it. Never change a game that is working. But, if there are weaknesses in your short game, it may be worth thinking about adding other tools.
My belief that I had to be committed to a single putting stroke held back my scoring. My regular putt is a straddle push putt that is very strong from inside 20-25 feet and seldom misses left or right. However, it comes out so softly that it is hard to make from much further out and is brutalized by the wind. It is designed to avoid three putts, not make long ones. For a long time, I felt that I just had to accept this trade-off. I experimented with a more powerful spin putt which was better from long distances, but from short range I would get a lot more spit outs and lose some of my accuracy. Switching didn’t seem worth it.
I saw changing my putting stroke as an all-or-nothing proposition, I either went with my trusty soft straddle putt or adopted a new spin putt. But there is no reason to throw every putt the same way. Obviously, we all change our stance and stroke when we need to putt around an obstacle – but distance is just another obstacle. It is totally fine to have a putt you use from close and then switch to a different putting style further from the basket — and then have another setup for jump putts. This approach is used by some great putters. Nate Sexton, for example, putted his short putts on one foot for a while. He still changes his stance from straddle to stagger and adds more spin as his putts get longer.
On the other side, developing a softer putt from close range is very helpful for putters who always putt firmly. There are players in my club who are great from long range, but putt just as hard from 20 feet as they do from 35. This can produce huge comeback putts if they miss the basket or a lot of spit outs and putts that blow through the chains (especially on old baskets.) The answer could be as simple as “putt softer,” but it can be hard to make those kinds of subtle changes in your timing and you could wind up hurting the putting stroke that is so effective at long range. Instead, a firm putter could develop a straddle putt or a push putt to take some of the pop out of their stroke without hurting their regular mechanics.
When you are putting from outside the circle, it is also important to control exactly how your disc is going to fly and land. You can use different setups to change how the disc approaches the basket. Developing a nose down putt allows you to be aggressive from longer distance since a missed nose down putt has such little glide it will still land close. This is how Ricky Wysocki can run at every basket from 80 feet and still have a short comebacker. If you know your putts will be straight and land soft, you can attack baskets with trouble behind them while minimizing the chance of blowing past the basket. If you also have a spin putt, you can use that when going long isn’t as punitive or you face a must-make from further out.
I have been trying to develop both and found it was very easy to avoid confusion by throwing my spin putts from a staggered stance and my push putts from a straddle. I can set the nose angle of a putt in my hand to increase and decrease the glide. Using different setups and starting angles makes it easy to keep the mechanics separate.
My practice got a lot more efficient when I thought about the game more like traditional golf – a set of challenges that each required a different technique. As a newer player, I wanted to change my setup to get those flights as automatically as possible and without having to adjust my mechanics mid-throw.
My upshots don’t feel anything like my drives and that’s okay – they’re a different game.
So…what do you say we disc around for a while? [wink]
Northwest Pennsylvania has become a much friendlier place for a fling in recent years, as the number of disc golf courses has roughly doubled. One of the newest courses is at Fairview Township’s Pleasant Ridge Park, the site of this weekend’s first annual Ice Chains Open. Sponsored by the Lake Erie Disc Golf Club in association with the Erie Sports Commission, the tournament will feature beginner, intermediate, and advanced divisions, with players trying to float specialized throwing discs into chain baskets in the fewest attempts possible.
As in standard golf, a full round is 18 holes; and like golf clubs, discs are categorized as drivers, mid-range, or putters – with subtle variations in weight, thickness, and aerodynamics for specific approach scenarios and situations. With a significantly lower barrier to entry than standard golf (a decent set of discs can be had for less than $100 and most courses are free to play), disc golf has garnered much popularity among younger adults in particular.
Mastery of the sport, however, still requires a serious investment of time, as the best players will have an innate feel for each disc in their repertoire and the mechanics to maximize each throw. That means the sport is contested year-round, sometimes even in the depths of winter. Ice Chains Open participants can expect cold but not frigid conditions for Saturday’s tee time, with a chance of snow showers in the morning. Players are encouraged to dress in layers and wear waterproof or water-resistant footwear, as significant snowmelt is expected midweek before the tournament.
Registration is $25 per player and includes lunch courtesy of Smith’s Provisions. Those who bring five non-perishable food items with them will receive two mulligans for the day, one for each round. Trophies will be awarded to the top three finishers in each division. Online registration closes on Feb. 17 at 8 p.m., but last-second registrants will be accepted in-person on the day of the event.
As long as you’ve gotten a grip on your plans by 8 a.m. Saturday morning, you should be cleared to take flight.
8 a.m. (check-in), 9 a.m. (competition starts) // Pleasant Ridge Disc Golf Park, 8271 Barker Rd., Fairview, PA 16415 // For more information, and to register, visit fairviewtownship.com/ice-chains-open-disc–golf–tournament.
The foundation’s First Putt initiative hopes to reach 100 schools in year one.
February 17, 2022 by Charlie Eisenhood in News with comments
Ricky Wysocki has launched a new charitable organization, the Sockibomb Foundation, that will seek to help disc golf reach the mainstream.
The foundation, which was promised when Wysocki announced his new multi-million dollar sponsorship deal with Dynamic Discs, will initially focus on getting disc golf into more schools through its First Putt initiative. Schools can be nominated or apply directly for First Putt for the opportunity to get 100 putters and a portable basket into the physical education department free of charge.
Las Vegas’s Wynn Elementary School will be receiving the first package from the First Putt initiative in advance of the Las Vegas Challenge next week.
“We’re planning on doing 100 schools in the first year,” said Wysocki. “…I just want to reach a younger generation, give them the opportunity, give them exposure to disc golf. A lot of them may love it. So I think this is going to be good for the sport, growing it from the grassroots level.”
The organization will seek to fundraise through direct donations and sponsorships. Wysocki himself will be putting money into the organization: $25 for every birdie, $100 for every eagle, and $1000 for every ace he cards in the 2022 season. He will also donate $1000 for any other aces at tournaments he competes in. Last year, he shot 426 birdies, 15 eagles, and 0 aces, which would have yielded $12,150 in donations (not counting the additional aces from other players).
The foundation, incorporated in Ohio and applying for 501(c)(3) non-profit status, has already established a Board of Directors comprised of Pete Cashen, John “JT” Thompson, Andrew Young, Lily Jurado, and Doug Bjerkaas. Ari Hyer, Wysocki’s tour manager, is serving as Executive Director. The foundation has already announced pledged support from Dynamic Discs, Latitude 64, Westside Discs, Sunstein LLP, LWS Tax & Accounting, Gatekeeper Media, and Shaffer Sports Management.
Wysocki is following in the footsteps of Paul McBeth, who last year started the Paul McBeth Foundation, which focuses on installing disc golf courses in underserved parts of the world.
The Sockibomb Foundation website will launch on February 25th. Questions about the foundation can be directed to [email protected].