A hole-in-one in just his fifth-ever round hooked Gillis MacDougall onto disc golf in 2019.
Two years later it led him halfway across the country to Milford, Mich., where he took second place in the 2021 PDGA United States Amateur Disc Golf Championship held earlier this month.
In just his third year of playing disc golf, the 17-year-old MacDougall now finds himself as one of the top-rated amateur players in the region.
After being exposed to the sport for the first time at Four Rivers Charter School in eighth grade, MacDougall took a casual interest in disc golf before his personality turned it into a passion.
“Anything I do, I don’t want to suck,” MacDougall said. “I’m a pretty competitive person.”
He started watching YouTube videos to correct his form, bought his own discs and began practicing throws in his free time.
MacDougall entered his first intermediate-level tournament in September 2019 and took first place. The following spring season was delayed due to the pandemic, but MacDougall continued to enter tournaments while raising his player rating.
Entering this spring season, MacDougall received an invitation to play in a national amateur tournament in Michigan, but said there were obstacles in the way.
“I looked at (the invitation) and was like, ‘I don’t have a license, I’m not even 17 yet, so probably not but I’ll ask my dad,’” MacDougall said. “I called my dad and was like ‘Can we go to Michigan,’ … and honestly it didn’t take too much convincing.”
MacDougall entered the final day of the event sitting outside the top three, but in his final round he shot a tournament-low 57 strokes, which earned him an “incredible” second-place finish.
He said it was a grueling weekend and he started to lose focus in the final round, but he persevered and put up his highest-rated round ever.
“I wish I had played all three rounds like that,” MacDougall said. “My friend kept telling me, ‘Keep doing what you’re doing.’”
Once he arrived at the tournament, MacDougall said he found out one of the players entering the tournament had a professional-level rating so he was determined to play his best and see how the results came out in the end.
“Rating is just a number,” MacDougall said. “In the end, losing to someone who a lot of people think should be a pro was way more than I ever thought I would get out.”
MacDougall said his takeaways from the tournament were that he was good enough to play at the national stage and the Professional Disc Golf Association takes care of its amateur players as well as its pros.
“Yes, I can stack up against the country,” MacDougall said. “The whole weekend atmosphere was crazy … it’s amazing to see how well amateur players are treated.”
Looking back on his hole-in-one, MacDougall said he had no clue it would change his life to the point where he was traveling around the country to play disc golf.
“I had no idea how much of my life it’d take over,” MacDougall said. “I was completely hooked. I signed the disc and it’s in my room.”
He added that disc golf’s popularity has grown in the past few years to the point where professionals can play as a full-time job. The pandemic also definitely drew a lot of new people to the sport.
“It’s grown big enough to where you can sustain yourself,” MacDougall said. “The sport and pro scene has exploded over the past year.”
MacDougall said he wants to continue playing the sport because he has fallen in love with disc golf and it is a possible career path now.
“It never feels like work,” MacDougall said. “I never want it to get to a point where it feels like work.”
Tyler Tannatt was in college after graduating from Johnston High School in 2005 when he was hit with crippling anxiety and depression.
“I played sports my whole life — baseball, basketball, soccer, football; you name it. All the way through high school. Then I went off to college and just got really homesick,” he said.
He began to suffer panic attacks so powerful that he could barely leave his room.
Relief came when a few friends introduced him to a new game.
“Some friends were playing disc golf and they said, ‘Come out. We’ll give you a couple of discs and just fling them around.’ I was so terrible. I was so terrible when I started playing, like most people.”
But being outdoors with friends lifted the burdens from his mind.
“I just started playing pretty much every day to keep me occupied — to keep my mind occupied,” Tannatt said. “I’ve been playing ever since.”
That devotion and passion, led Tannatt into his career as owner of Wander Disc Golf event planning and sport supplier, and the volunteer tournament director for this week’s Disc Golf Pro Tour stop at Pickard Park in Indianola, Friday through Sunday.
The Des Moines Metro Disc Golf Club is also supporting the event by incorporating their Des Moines Challenge disc golf tournament into the event.
Along with Pickard Park, the Des Moines Challenge will involve the Walnut Ridge disc golf course in Johnston, the Big Creek disc golf course in Polk City and the Ewing Park disc golf course in Des Moines.
World’s top disc golf athletes coming to central Iowa
More than 150 of the world’s top disc golf competitors will be in Indianola for the DGPT this week, including James Conrad, crowned the world’s greatest disc golf athlete two weeks ago at the PDGA Professional Disc Golf World Championships in Utah.
Conrad threw what many have called the greatest shot ever in disc golf, which came after making a hole-in-one earlier in the tournament. The clutch shot on hole 18 forced a playoff against five-time world champion Paul McBeth. Conrad, of course, walked away with the trophy.
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Because both Conrad and McBeth will compete in Indianola, fans are hoping for another match-up.
Also competing in the tour stop is Pickard Park’s disc golf course designer and five-time world champion Juliana Korver.
Another roughly 400 of Iowa’s top disc golf athletes are expected to be in attendance, too.
Because both the DGPT and the Des Moines Challenge competitor lists are full, registration is closed. Current PDGO membership is required to register for the Des Moines Challenge.
Seth Fendley, the director of disc golf administration and operations for the DGPT, said that despite forecasts for rain this weekend, as long as there isn’t any lightning, play will go on.
“We go on lightning delay when lightning is within a certain distance of the course — typically, it is within 15 miles,” he said via email. “Play continues when it is just raining — rain does not really influence the flight of the disc; it has more of an impact on how well the players can grip their discs.”
Wind also won’t cause the tour to be delayed, Fendley said. But wind will definitely change how a player approaches their game, he said.
The professional tour is the premier event for the unveiling of the newly updated Pickard Park gold- and silver-level layouts of the park’s disc golf course. Increased difficulty, length and precision highlight the 9,700-foot par-64 gold layout and the 8,600-foot par-65 silver layout.
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The pros will compete at Indianola’s Pickard Park, which is located at 2205 E 2nd Ave., while other divisions will play at Walnut Ridge, Big Creek and Ewing Park.
Why Indianola?
Fendley said the tour picked the Des Moines area and Pickard Park, in particular, for several reasons.
The first was timing. Because some European travel is still closed due to the pandemic, planners for the original event scheduled for Norway had to scramble for a second location, Fendley said. DGPT had already been talking with the Des Moines Challenge organizers to partner on an event in 2022, so a call was made in March to see if they could line up schedules for this year.
Another reason for choosing Pickard Park is the park’s history, its challenging layout, and the fact that the course is in excellent condition, Fendley said.
Doug Bylund, the city’s director of parks and recreation, said the course was built in 1999.
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The park also hosted the 2004 Pro World Championships, so the DGPT already knew the course was capable of hosting competitive professional play.
The park is a former farm. The land was donated to the city in the 1970s, Bylund said. Because the park is so large, the disc golf course was designed for a variety of skill levels. Each of the 18 holes has three tee boxes that allow for long, medium and short lengths for each hole. For professionals, the course will be challenging due to that length and the variety in the course including up hills, downhills and obstacles, like a big pond.
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Since the decision was made to move the DGPT to Pickard Park, Bylund said dozens of volunteers have put in thousands of hours of time sprucing up the course.
Fendley, with the DGPT, said one of the most important reasons to bring the event to Indianola is the course’s outstanding condition.
“With the innovations that have come into the game, they have continued to adjust the course to make it competitive for the top-level professionals,” he said.
What is the Disc Golf Pro Tour?
This year’s tour features 11 events across the country, starting in February in Las Vegas. The championship will be held in October in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The tour in its current format dates back to 2016, while the professional association, the Professional Disc Golf Association, has roots as far back as the 1960s. In its current form, the tour is designed to allow athletes an efficient tour format — rather than zig-zag across the country, Fendley said, competitors finish each leg of the tour on Sundays, drive to the next location and begin practice on the course by the following Tuesday. Before coming to Indianola, the tour was in Illinois. After the Iowa leg, the tour heads to Michigan and Minnesota before circling back to Illinois.
The tour also works closely with players and event locations to standardize play. For example, some courses will mark out of bounds with paint, a rope or stakes. The tour dictates white paint and white yard whiskers, Fendley said.
Another change to the sport starting in 2016 that has continued to grow and develop every year are the cash payouts to top players. In 2016, the tour doubled the funds added to the overall purse. Since then, the amount has doubled again, to $20,000.
“Before we redeveloped the tour in 2016, players were just barely scraping by,” Fendley said. “We are bringing in more money so professionals can make a living.”
An additional change to the sport, Fendley said, is bringing in more media sponsorships. The tour just closed a deal with ESPN2 to cover some of its events.
The future of the sport
Fendley says he thinks the future for disc golf is unlimited. The pandemic brought thousands of people outdoors, increasing exposure to disc golf courses, and with ever-growing media coverage and corporate sponsorships, he says the future looks solid.
One change coming for the tour is a bidding process so locations can lock in a one- to three-year event contract. Fendley said the change is going to create hot spots all over the country for the sport.
And with the development of a fan base will come better grass-roots feeder channels for developing talent, he said.
“In the next five to 10 years, we think it will be more difficult to get into our tour, but also, we see more lower-tier professional opportunities developing,” he said.
The tour’s local volunteer director, Tyler Tannatt, who now lives in Ankeny with his wife and soon-to-be 1-year-old son, agrees that the sport’s trajectory will only continue to swing upward.
His company, Wander Disc Golf, manages disc golf events and retails disc golf sportswear, including jerseys, hats and socks.
But perhaps more importantly, he is structuring his company around the gifts disc golf has given him — a portion of the company’s profits benefit mental health organizations. Along with disc golf therapy, as he calls it, Tannatt discovered a hormonal imbalance that is treated successfully today.
“I feel great again — that’s my reason for my brand, to share my story, to share my experiences so that if there are other people out there struggling, they can at least see that I’ve gone through it, you can get through it; it’s not the end of the world; you can get to be who you want to be.”
Tannatt is echoing the father of disc golf, “Steady” Ed Headrick, who said in an interview at the 1993 PDGA Professional World Championships that disc golf has been a gift to “the tremendous multitude of wandering souls.”
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Want to go?
Live-streaming: The competition’s three days will be streamed on the tour’s platform, theDisc Golf Network. Daily recaps and streaming of the third day will also be available for free on the Disc Golf Pro Tour’sYouTube channel.
Spectators are welcome to attend the professional events at Pickard Park as well as the events at the Ewing, Big Creek and Walnut Ridge courses. Tickets are required for the professional rounds at Pickard Park. Spectators can attend the rounds at Ewing, Big Creek and Walnut Ridge for free.
As of Friday, more than 700 of the available 1,000 tickets had been sold.
Tickets are available on the tour’s website, DGPT.com. More information about this weekend’s events can be found at DesMoinesChallenge.com.
Ticket packages are:
A 3-day VIP spectator pass for $107 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating including all general admission areas as well as a commemorative event disc by Discraft and sticker.
A 3-day general admission spectator pass for $35.80 that offers access to all three spectator zones viewing of holes 1-5, 6-8 and 18.
A Friday VIP spectator pass for $30.13 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
A Saturday VIP spectator pass for $35.80 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
A Sunday VIP spectator pass for $47.14 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
Details on the DSM Challenge’s schedule can be found at DesMoinesChallenge.com.
Schedule details:
Men tee off in the morning; women tee off in the afternoon.
Male and female elite professional division tee times, at Pickard Park:
Round 1, Friday: 7:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Round 2, Saturday: 7:30 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Round 3, Sunday: 7:30 a.m.- 4 p.m.
An awards ceremony will immediately follow Sunday’s final round at tournament central at Pickard Park.
Male and female Pool B, Pool C, Pool D schedule:
Round 1, Friday: Shotgun start at 9 a.m.
Pool B: Big Creek, Polk City
Pool C: Walnut Ridge, Johnston
Pool D: Ewing, Des Moines
Round 2, Saturday: Shotgun start at 9 a.m.
Pool B: Ewing
Pool C: Big Creek
Pool D: Walnut Ridge
Round 3, Sunday: Shotgun start at 8:30 a.m.
Pool B: Walnut Ridge
Pool C: Ewing
Pool D: Big Creek
An awards ceremony will immediately follow at tournament central at Pickard Park, in Indianola.
Teresa Kay Albertson is a reporter for the Des Moines Register and Indianola Record Herald. Reach her at [email protected] or 515-419-6098.
In the six years since Eagle McMahon began touring as a professional disc golfer, he‘s seen a change. When he started, there might’ve been one production crew at tournaments. Even then, next-day coverage of events was rare — and live coverage was nonexistent.
These days coverage has exploded, with events broadcast live over the web, broadcast TV and on the Disc Golf Network’s app. There’s more money and galleries at events are bigger. When McMahon plays at his local course in Boulder, Colorado, he stops to sign autographs. He‘s recognized at the airport, which he described as “the craziest thing to me.”
For the 23-year-old, “It almost feels like a completely different sport.”
The contours of the game itself haven’t changed — players still follow the basic rules of traditional golf, replacing the club, the hole in the ground and the ball with an arm, an elevated basket and a flying disc — commonly called a “Frisbee,” the trademarked name of one particular brand that often serves as a generic stand-in for the entire product category.
Disc golfers have long nurtured lofty ambitions for the sport, dreaming for decades of outgrowing the niche label.
There’s a feeling — supported by a record $10 million endorsement deal for five-time world champion Paul McBeth and increased coverage and fan attention — that the sport is poised for a breakthrough.
The momentum building behind the sport is exciting, but golfers like McMahon are trying to maintain a sense of perspective.
“Every disc golfer kind of fantasizes about the idea of it being constantly on ESPN, live coverage week in and week out,” McMahon said. “Of course, that would be really cool. But they were saying that since the ‘80s, so I try to more take it a month, a year at a time.”
The pandemic effect
Most of the sports world took a hit from COVID-19. The opposite happened for disc golf.
“Without a doubt, the pandemic supercharged the sport of disc golf,” said Matthew Rothstein, the Pro Disc Golf Association’s media manager. “As people wrapped their heads around what the pandemic meant, what the safe activities were as opposed to the dangerous activities, it became really clear that disc golf was really well-suited for the circumstances of the pandemic.”
Like traditional golf, which offers social distancing and an outdoor course, disc golf became more appealing during the pandemic. New players came out in droves.
For much of the past decade, the PDGA’s membership numbers have seen a steady increase of about 15% each year. But with a surge in interest beginning in June 2020, memberships rose between 2019 and 2020 by 33%, Rothstein said. According to data from UDisc, there were between 35 and 37 million rounds played on the roughly 8,000 courses in the United States in 2020, with 193 of those registered PDGA courses in Virginia and Maryland alone.
The interest in the game has continued into 2021, with total memberships up 18% in six months compared to the year before.
Part of the increase can be attributed to the reduction in other activities during the pandemic that prompted people to find new forms of recreation. And with a low barrier of entry, the sport is easy to try.
“Some of the biggest companies in the sport, they simply cannot make enough discs,” said Jeff Spring, the CEO of the Disc Golf Pro Tour. “They’ve scaled up, they’ve doubled their production, they still can’t make enough to satiate the demand for discs.”
The money
When McMahon played locally as a kid, other players often urged him, as an up-and-comer, to get on the road and travel for tournament events.
It was advice was easier given than put into action. Barely into his teens, McMahon didn’t have the funding to support to travel at that age. But by the time he was 15, he‘d earned a 1,000 rating — rare for someone so young, especially for someone sticking mostly to local events.
The national stage called. And this time, McMahon answered.
“My second National Tour event ever, I was on lead card, final round, competing against the best players in the world,” McMahon said. “And right there, I was like, ‘OK, maybe there’s something more to this.’”
Since then, McMahon has risen to the top of Ultiworld’s disc golf rankings. He’s won four events in 2021 and has 49 career wins, amassing over $200,000 in tournament prize money.
“The money to start wasn’t great, and it still isn’t exactly what it needs to be,” McMahon said. “But there are players who are out there making a living, and a lot of players who are doing very well at this point, at least for the top-10 players in the world. So the opportunities are more there now than there was ever before.”
Spring acknowledges the sport has a way to go in terms of money, but there are strides being made.
The purse values have doubled in 2021 compared to 2020, and Spring figures those purses will double again soon, leading to the Disc Golf Pro Tour’s first $500,000 purse within a year. He figures the first million-dollar purse should follow in a few more years.
“It keeps surprising me what we’re able to do,” Spring said.
As the purse sizes increase with the help of higher ticket sales, sponsorships and endorsement deals are swelling, too. McBeth’s $10-million contract with Discraft, a disc manufacturer, has established a baseline for what the best players in the sport can receive while paving the way for others.
“For any sport, the players and professionals are going to exist within the ceiling that the best of those players sets,” Spring said. “So the higher that Paul can set that ceiling, I think everybody else will kind of fall in higher and higher ranks for their own contracts, their own success.”
Visibility
Rothstein remembers the excitement that animated conversations about disc golf two decades ago.“We’re gonna be on ESPN very soon, because this sport is just so fun, so exciting, so accessible,” Rothstein recalled people saying at the time.
“But I don’t think people had a realistic view of how far we had to go to bridge the gap between YouTube-produced video all the way to big, national mainstream media,” Rothstein added.
Disc golf still isn’t there — at least not fully. When the Disc Golf Pro Tour began in 2016, the main content producers were YouTubers, shooting video that would be made into segments later. There was no live coverage.
But as the Disc Golf Pro Tour grew, so did those YouTube channels, attracting vast audiences that show there is interest in the sport.
JomezPro, for instance, now has 313,000 subscribers. For any sports league, a television deal can be highly lucrative. But the Disc Golf Pro Tour and PDGA received their first platform from more niche markets, and they don’t forget that.
“We certainly do hope it becomes more mainstream, and we absolutely have ambitions to get our events on national media platforms,” Rothstein said. “But there’s also a sense of, you know, not wanting to turn our back on those who brought us here, and the people who really contributed in the last 10 years to growing the awareness of the sport are these YouTubers content producers.”
In the time since, disc golf has landed on ESPN and CBS Sports Network for select events, and highlights — such as James Conrad’s 247-foot birdie at the Disc Golf World Championship in Utah in June — are circulated far and wide.
But Spring felt live content was necessary for the Disc Golf Pro Tour, leading to the inception of the Disc Golf Network in 2020. In just over a year, the network has pulled in 25,000 subscribers. He hopes that is just the start.
“Down the road, maybe we’ll have bigger decisions to make with national media,” Spring said. “I think putting the Disc Golf Pro Tour events live on ESPN in the future, there may be a decision about that in the future.”
Sky’s the limit
Disc golf isn’t immune to the growing pains that follow a push into the mainstream. As more fans show interest in attending Disc Golf Pro Tour events, Spring is left to change venue plans for the next five years to accommodate for more parking and room for spectators.
Rothstein said there’s a need for more tournaments overall, because there are more players interested than event organizers can accommodate.
But those are good challenges to face for a growing sport, one that now boasts a player with a $10-million endorsement deal and surging fan interest that could attract the eye of national broadcasters. It’s a preview of what could be on the horizon — of what’s rising ever nearer into full view.
“As long as we keep doing good stuff, and producing great disc golf content, there’s going to be more fans out there and more people watching,” Spring said. “And the sky’s the limit.”
It can be challenging, and It can also be relaxing. It can be played solo, and it can also be a fun way to connect with friends and family. It’s relatively cheap to get started and most courses are free to play. It’s usually outdoors and no two courses are the same. And, it’s socially distanced by nature.
It’s no wonder disc golf has continued to gain in popularity over the years, and that trend wasn’t hindered by the pandemic.
More than 50 million rounds of golf were played around the world in 2020, according to a study conducted by UDisc.com. That’s more than 135,000 disc golf rounds per day.
The Professional Disc Golf Association also saw an increase of 26,632 new players in 2020, marking a 13th straight year of growth.
The sport recently drew global attention after James Conrad’s incredible 247-foot throw-in on the 18th hole of the 2021 PDGA World Championships to force overtime. The crowd in Ogden, Utah, erupted as Conrad charged down the fairway in celebration. Conrad’s “shot heard around the world” is both a viral and defining moment in the sport’s history.
Gregg Barsby, the 2018 PDGA World Champion, has been a pro player for nearly 20 years, and has witnessed disc golf blossom into one of the fastest growing sports in the world.
The Grass Valley native got his start at Condon Park as a teen in the 1990s, and parlayed his countless hours on the course and passion for the sport into a career that has taken him all over the world.
Fresh off his sixth place finish at the 2021 World Championships, I took some time to talk with the No. 20 ranked men’s player in the world about the sport’s popularity, his maturation as a competitor and what he still hopes to accomplish.
FORD: After that James Conrad throw-in on the 18th to force sudden death at the World Championships, the crowd went wild. It seemed indicative of the excitement around the sport and how the sport has grown in popularity. Do you agree?
BARSBY: For sure. I think that through the pandemic a lot of people were exposed to the game because all the other sports weren’t available. So, there’s been a ton of growth as far as new players and people coming into the sport.
And, I mean, there’s not much you can say about what James (Conrad) did. It was unreal. The energy on site was electric. People were hugging people they didn’t know. It was one of those shots that really brings people together, and I think more than anything else it’s a catalyst. A shot like that brings media attention, all these outlets are picking that shot up.”
FORD: You’ve been a pro for awhile now. How has the sport grown over the years?
BARSBY: When I started playing pro I was 15, I was still going to Nevada Union. Back then, there was not really even a tour. When I started touring in 2007, there were maybe a dozen people who were on tour. There wasn’t the amount of people or companies or sponsors that were involved. It was still very much a backyard, grassroots sport. The growth has come from, I think, people that enjoy the game and can see it for what it is.
Besides just being a recreational sport, I think people have fallen in love with it. You’re always in constant pursuit of another level, or being able to control your disc, and getting that empowerment from making great shots or creating great shots. I think people have really fallen in love with it because it’s so much fun to play, it’s relatively inexpensive to get involved and most the courses we play are free. So, the accessibility is there and with the way the world is, things being very expensive, I think it’s a great alternative to a lot of other sports.
FORD: As someone who has been a part of the sport as it grew from those early grassroots years, what have been some of the turning points for you along the way?
BARSBY: I think some of the big stepping stones for me were going to Europe and experiencing some different cultures because of the game. It wasn’t that I just went to Europe to experience it, I had a goal in mind, a mission when I first went in 2014. I got top 10 at the European Masters that year and started to make a name for myself across the pond as well. I was able to use disc golf as a platform and catalyst for going to these different places, experiencing different cultures and meeting people from all over the world…
And, obviously I’ve had some great finishes. I’ve got a bunch of top fives in majors, but more than anything when I won the World Championship in 2018, that was a real catapult for what I was doing. I had already been touring relentlessly, pushing for months on end in Europe, doing clinics for months on end and I think winning the championship really put a statement on what I had already been doing, and was more of a validation point.
And, I’ve experienced a little bit of growth since then. I’ve been able to host my own series (Barsby Battle Series) of events. I’ve hosted around 70 of my own events with my girlfriend since I won the World Championship. It kind of gives me the opportunity to meet my fans and my friends all over the place. That was the big one, though. Winning the World Championships is life changing.
FORD: When you look back to your teen years playing at Condon Park, did you ever think this would be your life? That disc golf would pay the bills and take you all over the world?
BARSBY: I always wanted it to be. That’s the big kicker, right? When you’re passionate about what you’re doing, you’re really the only person that can stop it from happening. Over time, I’ve learned from my mistakes, I’ve been able to maneuver through an emerging niche sport and build a fan base, and a friend base — which is more important. If you don’t have the friend base, it’s hard to build a fan base. Your friends are going to promote you through word of mouth and that’s still the strongest form of marketing.
I love thinking back on those times, and thinking back to the people who said I was not going to be able to do this, because I’ve proven them wrong and proven myself right, which is a good feeling.
It doesn’t come easy. Some guys win when they are young, but I feel like having the experience of being on the road for so long, and then finally achieving that ultimate goal of winning the World Championships was more of a reflection and introspective point for me, where I could see that all of the time I put in was really worth it. Now, I’m at a point where I’ve kind of got to make this count. In athletics, you only have a certain amount of time to capitalize on your successes. And, that’s what I’ve been focused on doing.
FORD: How much longer do you think you can compete at this high of a level?
BARSBY: I can see myself playing at a high level until probably my mid-40s. If I can keep my mind and body healthy, I don’t see there being an issue. There are really good players in their 40s that can still compete.
With the pro tour, it’s kind of morphing and some of the courses are getting longer. I’m not known as a very long thrower anymore. I mean I can throw a long way, I can throw 500 feet accurately, but some of these guys can throw a really long way and they have been setting up some of the courses for those long bombers. But, I think I can be competitive in certain arenas into my mid-40s, but like anything, there are certain courses that cater to the game I like to play and other courses where it doesn’t really cater to me too well. As the years go on I think I’ll be able to be a little more definitive in which events i want to play and where I want to spend my energy. Disc golf is a lot different from golf in the sense that our courses vary dramatically. We’ll play on a traditional golf course one weekend, then the next weekend, we’ll be in the tight woods, in the forest.
FORD: What is it about Nevada County that produces high-quality disc golf talent?
BARSBY: We just have a rich history of the sport where we’re from. You know, we’ve got hall of famers in town like Johnny and Geoff Lissaman and Michael Travers. He installed the course in Condon Park in, I think in 1992, and I found a disc in 1993 when my parents moved in across the street. I was brought into this kind of underground culture, and back then it wasn’t as much a social sport, it was more just people who had a love for throwing the disc. We have good mentors in Grass Valley. There are a lot of players that know how to play because, again, we’re rich in history. We were in early and we had a lot of good players in town.
FORD: Tell me about some of the events you host?
BARSBY: We host a slew of different style events, but we mostly do PDGA C Tier events, and we host those on the road in between my tour stops. Players come out, get a demo, a clinic, they play a round, players get a rating, and then they get a custom disc and a whole bunch of swag. We try to make it memorable. We founded the (Barsby) Battle Series on being an entry level way to get your feet wet, and as kind of like a stepping stone to bigger events.
FORD: You recently moved to Texas. What took you to the Lone Star State?
BARSBY: I had talked to my dad about it maybe six years ago, and this was in the throes of touring a bunch. There was about four or five years in a row where I spent 300 days on the road…
From my house here in Tyler, I can get to 10 states within 10 hours. So as far as hosting events and also promoting my line of discs and also the company that I work for promoting my name and my events, I can get to a lot of places. Whereas in California, it’s a 35-hour drive to get to the Midwest.
Also, the scene out here is insane. Houston and Austin both have tens of thousands of disc golfers. There’s multiple clubs in each of these cities. There’s a much bigger scene out here as far as the amount of courses you can play.
FORD: At this stage of your career, is it all about winning the big tourneys?
BARSBY: Totally. The pro tour has been doing a good job of not only promoting the sport but promoting the players as well. They have really nice events and run a super clean show.
At the big events, the cream really does rise to the top, and it really all depends on where your head space is. And that’s where my head has been focused, on the biggest events and on the biggest stages. Sixth place (at Worlds) isn’t exactly what I really wanted, I would have loved to be in the top five, but I did finish higher than the No. 1 player in the world, which was cool. There was a bunch of good players that I beat out at that event. They’ve been beating me all year and then it came to the Worlds and I shot a really good game. But there’s always room for improvement.
The US Open is the one I haven’t won and it’s actually the lowest finish of any of my majors. That’s the one I need to grit my teeth, buckle down and sharpen my skills come early October.
FORD: What would you say to people who dream to be a pro disc golfer?
BARSBY: I would tell them to stay off social media and focus on the game. I think social media is an important component in building your brand, but it’s more important to focus on the things you can control, which is the disc. Just practice hard. And don’t let anyone tell you, ‘you can’t do it.’ Because, ultimately, it’s going to be you who makes that decision.
PEORIA — The 2021 Ledgestone Insurance Open is bigger and better.
Historic big, in fact.
“We have 2,000 participants registered this year, the most ever here for this tournament, and a record as the largest field in the history of the disc golf sport,” said Ledgestone founder and longtime director Nate Heinold. “It’s just massive on a scale hard to imagine. We’re so excited to see the sport thrive like this.”
The Disc Golf Pro Tour’s Ledgestone is bigger than ever in other ways, too. The prize money for the Men’s and Women’s Pro divisions is $130,000 — the biggest purse in the history of the sport.
Nate Heinold:Why the new office and warehouse in Washington? This annual event had outgrown its storage
And the tournament, which has always worked as a fundraiser for local charities, expects to generate a record donation this year.
“We’re looking at raising $150,000 for charities,” Heinold said. “That will be the largest we’ve ever been able to donate.”
Who’s playing in the Ledgestone Insurance Open?
The Pro Men’s and Pro Women’s field is stacked with elite world-ranked players. It includes Ledgestone veteran Paul McBeth, who has $555,000 in career winnings and just finished runnerup in the World Championships at Utah in late June.
James Conrad, who emerged from that tournament as World Champion, is in the Ledgestone field, too.
So is elite world-ranked player Ricky Wysocki ($462,000 in career winnings). And on the women’s side, Catrina Allen and Paige Pierce line up just days after Allen beat Pierce on the final hole for the World Championship.
Wysocki and Allen won the 2020 Ledgestone.
Where is the Ledgestone Insurance Open played?
The 2021 edition of the event takes part on 12 courses around the Peoria area, but the pros will play on Lake Eureka and Northwood Park in Morton. The Ledgestone has grown to 74 staff members, countless volunteers and 12 courses.
Play will happen at Bradley Park (Peoria), Camp Kearney (Canton), Kennel Lake (Morton), Lake Eureka (Eureka), McNaughton Park (Pekin), Megiddo at Westwood Park (Morton), Northwood Park (Morton), Sunset Hills Disc Golf Course (Pekin), Washington Park (Washington), Wildlife Prairie Park (Hanna City), Illinois Central College (East Peoria).
You can find directions to each course here.
New this year is the Northwood Park Black course in Morton. It’s a 10,500-foot course cut into the woods at Morton and designed with U.S. Open style angles and hazards.
“It is, officially, the hardest disc golf course in the world,” Heinold said. “It will challenge the world’s best players.”
Can fans attend the Ledgestone Insurance Open?
The 2020 Ledgestone operated under pandemic conditions, with roped off areas to achieve distancing, masks required and reduced spectators capacity.
But 2021 has no capacity limits or mask requirements for spectators.
“It’s back to a more normal feeling,” Heinold said.
There are various attendance options.
Look back at 2020:How the Peoria area’s biggest disc golf tournament got bigger, better amid COVID-19
VIP Badge: $95 for the week includes parking, event admission, VIP tent access (food on hand), and a spectator pack that includes GRIPeq G Series bag, a limited edition disc, tournament T-shirt, tournament badge.
Weekly parking pass: $35 allows one person parks free and gets event admission, plus a Ledgestone disc and T-shirt.
Daily parking pass: $10 includes admission on days pro open men or women play at Eureka or Sunset Hills. Not available at Northwood Park.
Note: Only VIP or Weekly Parking Pass holders will be permitted to spectate at Northwoods Park in Morton. Also, above admission options are for one person. Additional fees are charged to additional people in the same car.
Ledgestone Insurance Open schedule
Age-group divisions outside the pro levels play throughout the week at various courses. There also are special events and meet and greets. Full schedule is below:
Wednesday, 3-4 p.m. — Discraft pro players clinic with Paul Ulibarri and Ben Callaway at Sunset Hills (Pekin).
Wednesday, 4-7 p.m. — Play with the Champs exhibition at Sunset Hills (Pekin) with pros Ricky Wysocki, Missy Gannon, Nate Sexton and Paul Ulibarri.
Thursday, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. — First round: Men’s Pro Open tees at Lake Eureka Disc Golf Course. Women’s Pro Open tees at Northwood Park Black Course (Morton).
Thursday, 6-8 p.m. — Paul McBeth and Paige Pierce meet-and-greet with fans at Eureka. Live music, food, ice cream sundae/root beer floats.
Friday, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. — Second round: Men’s Pro Open tees at Northwood Park Black Course (Morton). Women’s Pro Open tees at Sunset Hills (Pekin).
Saturday, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. — Third round: Men’s Pro Open tees at Northwood Park Black Course (Morton). Women’s Pro Open tees at Sunset Hills (Pekin).
Sunday, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. — Final round: Men’s Pro Open tees at Lake Eureka Disc Golf Course. Women’s Pro Open tees at Northwood Park Black Course (Morton).
Dave Eminian is the Journal Star sports columnist, and covers Bradley men’s basketball, the Rivermen and Chiefs. He writes the Cleve In The Eve sports column for pjstar.com. Reach him at 686-3206 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @icetimecleve.
DGPT Announces Points and Awards Structure for the 2022 Season
Tour Championship introduces play in qualifier event for bottom two seeds
February 18th, 2022: The Disc Golf Pro Tour is excited to announce its points and awards structure for the 2022 season. An updated points structure will include PDGA Professional Majors* and make adjustments to points earnings for DGPT postseason events. Silver series events will award 25% of standard DGPT Elite Series points. DGPT playoff events will award 125% and PDGA Professional Majors will award points at 150%. To qualify for the first DGPT playoff event (Discraft’s Green Mountain Championship), players must fall within the top one hundred MPO players or the top fifty FPO players based on tour points. The top sixty-four MPO and top thirty-two FPO will qualify for the second playoff event (MVP Open at Maple Hill).
The Tour Championship will maintain the same format as the 2021 season with thirty-two MPO and sixteen FPO players competing over four rounds with the top four scores from each round advancing. For the 2022 Tour Championship, the top thirty MPO and top fourteen FPO players in tour points will automatically qualify and be granted byes based on their final points standings.
The two final spots in each division will be determined by a play-in event to be held the Wednesday prior to the start of the event. The 31st and 32nd seeds on the MPO side and the 15th and 16th seeds on the FPO side will automatically gain entry to the play-in event and will be joined by four additional players in each division. These four play-in spots will be reserved for any players who won a DGPT Elite Series event or PDGA Professional Major but did not qualify for the Tour Championship. If there are still spots available, the invitation is passed to the next player(s) in the DGPT points standings. The DGPT retains the right to add players to the play in tournament based on any future COVID-19 disruptions.
In addition to the silver series and Elite Series events currently on the schedule, the DGPT will host its second Match Play Championship June 16th – 19th in Bailey Colorado at the Bailey Disc Golf Course. Sixteen players from each division will qualify for the match play event with Elite Series winners automatically qualifying and all remaining spots being awarded based on tour points standings after the OTB Open.
After the conclusion of the Tour Championship, the DGPT will announce its season awards in its first-ever awards show to celebrate the completion of the 2022 season streamed live on the DGN. The season awards are as follows.
Player of the Year
Criteria – 33% Media Vote, 33% Tour Points, 33% Average Finish at PDGA Professional Majors + Tour Championship.
Rookie of the Year
Criteria – Given to the player with the highest points total who has not played more than 3 combined DGPT Elite Series events, PDGA National Tour events, or PDGA Professional Major events in a single previous season. Players who have competed in two or more PDGA Professional Majors in a single previous season will also be ineligible for the award.
Most Improved
Criteria – 50% Fan Vote, 50% Media Vote (tiebreaker is DGPT points total).
1st Card All-Stars (4 Players)
Criteria – DGPT Points Standings
2nd & 3rd Card All-Stars (8 Players)
Criteria – 25% Fan Vote, 25% Media Vote, 25% Tour Points, 25% Average Finish at PDGA Professional Majors + Tour Championship.
The first Disc Golf Pro Tour Elite Series event will begin on February 24th in Las Vegas.
* The DGPT will award 2022 tour points for the following divisions at PDGA Professional Majors:
MPO/FPO at PDGA Professional World Championships
MPO/FPO at PDGA Champions Cup
MPO/FPO at European Open
MPO at United States Disc Golf Championship
FPO at PDGA United States Women’s Disc Golf Championships
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For media inquiries, please contact DGPT Communications Manager, Charles McCracken at [email protected].
Small saucer-like objects will be flying about the England Idlewild Park in Burlington, Ky. this weekend. These plastic spheres are commonly known as Frisbees but to those that fling them far and wide on a regular basis, they are a disc.
There is a disc golf course in the park and you may be surprised to know there are more than 6,600 such courses in the United States. Kentucky had 111 in a recent 2020 count with Ohio weighing in at 264. Texas leads the way with 448.
Thanks to the surging popularity of the sport, there is also a Disc Golf Pro Tour. The smaller, harder discs sailing this weekend will leave the hands of professionals who will be competing in the Idlewild Open. The course in Burlington is located about 30 minutes from downtown Cincinnati and just 12 minutes from the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky airport.
It’s an event so much in demand that tickets are sold for spectators to watch competitors send a $10-20 disc into orbit. VIP passes priced at $130 sold out in the beginning of July. The event begins Friday and runs through Sunday. Individual tickets are $10 for Friday and $20 for Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are available at www.theidlewildopen.com. It’s the first time general admission tickets have been sold at Idlewild.
“The Disc Golf Pro Tour is the premier tour in disc golf,” Idlewild Open spokesperson Andy Shenk said. “They have an Elite Series, which is their top tier. The Idlewild Open is one of their top 10 events. All of the top players in North America will be at this event.”
Approximately 1,000 fans per day are expected. The course is considered one of the tougher ones on the tour. The event will also be live-streamed for a subscription fee. The recent World Championships had 37,000 live stream viewers at its peak.
To give you an idea of who you may be watching or what’s at stake, five-time world champion Paul McBeth recently signed a 10-year $10 million sponsor deal with Discraft. a maker of discs. Cincinnati native Rebecca Cox, currently ranked 12th on the tour, has been a pro since 2012. Cox was third at Idlewild in 2018.
The money is far from what traditional golf pros make, but top-rated player Eagle McMahon has made more than $44,000 this year for his weekend flings. Minus a sponsor deal like McBeth, tour players rely on merchandise sales at events and it’s not uncommon for disc golfers to stay with others to save on lodging expenses. McMahon is the defending Idlewild men’s champion.
For perspective on the difference of a professional player and someone engaging in picnic Frisbee, top males can easily throw 600 feet or 200 yards (two football fields) with the top distances nearing 700 feet in an open field. Top women clear 400 feet which was actually what the men were throwing 10-15 years ago according to Shenk.
Strangely, one of the byproducts of the coronavirus pandemic was it made people look for non-contact sports involving social distancing. Thus the increased popularity of disc golf. Traditional golf courses were one of the first things to re-open with restrictions and disc golf courses have always been in the open.
“Covid was a huge boost because people didn’t have many other things they could do,” Shenk said. “Local participation skyrocketed. The local disc golf shops doubled their business last year. Local tournaments that would never fill up in the past opened up online registration for amateurs to play and would sell out in 30 minutes, filling up 100 spots.”
As a result, where the Idlewild Open used to be free, fans are now willing to buy tickets.
“We have food trucks and everything set up,” Shenk said. “We’re also looking at future years adding an alcohol license where there could be a beer tent and we could get some local breweries involved.”
With men’s and women’s divisions, tee-off times begin at 7:30 a.m. for men and 1 p.m. for women. Like a PGA event, there’s seeding and the top players eventually tee off together on Sunday. Like the PGA, players have caddies.
Prize money is dependant on ticket sales.
“Idlewild has the reputation of being the hardest course and hardest tournament on the Disc Golf Pro Tour,” Shenk said. “It’s because of the amount of trees, the amount of tight fairways and the amount of danger if you go off the fairway and are stuck in the bushes.”
The Idlewild Disc Golf Course was designed specifically for disc golf and has been ranked among the Top 10 on the circuit. It is open from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. seven days a week.
After eight challenging rounds, played out across five days in Florida, Serenity Madison was exhausted. She was also a world champion.
Madison dominated her division at the PDGA Amateur Disc Golf World Championships last week in Orlando, claiming the Women’s Masters 40-plus title by a whopping 11 strokes.
“It was strenuous and arduous,” Madison said. “It was all about endurance. I’ve never played that much disc golf.”
In the opening round, Madison played well, but sat in second place by one stroke. By the end of the second round, the Newcastle resident held a seven stroke lead. Madison maintained a substantial lead across the next three rounds, but struggled at the conclusion of the sixth round, which allowed the next closest competitor, Meg Sapp, to close to within three strokes heading into the semifinals.
After that round, Madison called her husband for some encouraging words, ate some pizza and took some time in the spa.
“I re-centered myself and ended up crushing the semifinals and the finals,” she said.
Madison was six strokes better than Sapp in the semifinals and two strokes better in the finals to earn the 11-stroke victory and title of world champ.
“It took a lot of mental energy to keep myself centered and focused on that next shot, and meditation really helped with that,” she said. “I’m definitely a stronger, better person for persevering through that and rising above.”
Madison finished with a 19-above par 437. The next closest competitor was Sapp at 30-over par.
‘IT’S TIME’
Madison first started playing the sport in 1995 when she was 15 years old. By 2003 she was competing at a high level, and in 2005 won her division at the California State Championships.
Madison was then hampered by a shoulder injury, which forced her to take a break from competitive disc golf. It wasn’t until July 2020, the now wife and mother, truly delved back into the sport, doing so as a way to deal with the stresses brought upon by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I was just looking to get out of the house,” she said. “We were all in quarantine, and I needed some space, some fresh air and some exercise.
“I didn’t think I would ever be able to play again, let alone play competitively, so I was just trying to get out of the house and have some fun, get some exercise and help my mental health.”
It wasn’t long after that she realized she still had the skills to compete at an elite level.
“This time around, once I started understanding that I could set some real cool goals for myself, I set my sights on the world championships,” she said.
In addition to her recent victory at the amateur world championships, Madison also won the Amateur Women’s Masters 40-plus division at the 2021 United States Women’s Disc Golf Championships in May.
With all her recent success, Madison is an amateur no more.
“I turned 40 and decided to become a competitive, sponsored athlete,” Madison said with a laugh. “It’ll really hit me when I play my first tournament as a pro, but I’m ready. It’s time. It’s been time.”
Madison expressed gratitude for her family, supporters and sponsors: Throw Pink Disc Golf, Legit Apparel, FlighTowel, and Penn Valley based Sublime Disc Dye’s.
“We’re just ecstatic for her,” said Mike Cassaro, who owns Sublime Disc Dyes along with his wife Lanay Cassaro. “We wanted Serenity on our team because of her passion for the sport, integrity and what she wants to do for the community. That’s where we really connected. We are all for getting more women and kids into disc golf, and growing the sport for everybody. … She is always happy and positive, and we are, too, and that’s why we connected and wanted to work with her.”
Madison’s positivity garnered the nickname of “SoulShine” which she has now turned into her own apparel brand that can be purchased through her Facebook and Instagram accounts.
“Things are moving so fast for me, but I’m so grateful for my disc golf journey and where it has taken me, and where it is taking me,” Madison said. “I’m so grateful that I get to show my family, and inspire people around me, that it’s never too late to follow your dreams.”
A collection of the top professional disc golfers are coming to Steel Club in Hellertown for the Disc Golf Pro Tour Match Play Championship this weekend.
The tournament will kick-off with practice rounds and a skins match on Thursday, with head-to-head competition beginning on Friday. The event’s match play structure will feature one-on-one matchups between the golfers, with the winner advancing through the single elimination bracket.
“Match play is an incredibly exciting format and it is one that has a rich history in one-on-one competition,” a press release for the event reads.
This weekend’s Match Play Championship will be played on a special, 12-hole layout designed in part by Steve Braud, Steel Club’s disc golf professional.
The men’s bracket features 16 golfers, while the women’s bracket features eight. This weekend’s event comes at the end of the 2021 Disc Golf Pro Tour, and invitations were sent out to the top ranked men and women golfers on this year’s tour.
The men’s bracket features notable golfers including Eagle McMahon, Ricky Wysocki and Calving Heimberg. James Conrad, who won the 2021 Pro Disc Golf World Championships thanks in part to a miraculous throw on the 18th hole, is ranked seventh.
The full bracket is available on the Disc Golf Pro Tour Instagram page.
A purse of a minimum of $20,000 will be distributed among the field of 24 golfers. This weekend’s event will also be broadcast live on the Disc Golf Network, the press release says.
The event is the first of its kind to be hosted at Steel Club’s 27-hole golf course facility. A special, 12-hole disc golf layout has been arranged for the Match Play Championship.
Discmania, a well-known disc golf brand, is sponsoring this weekend’s tournament.
“Discmania founder, Jessin Meresmaa, is known across the globe for running some of the biggest and best events in the world, such as the European Open and the Presidents Cup,” the press release reads. “The Steel Club is just the type of venue that can accommodate another prestigious, high-caliber Discmania event.”
“We are looking forward to hosting the DGPT Match Play Championship at Steel Club,” said Steel Club General Manager Grace Spirk. “The sport of disc golf is growing exponentially and we are excited to be a part of growth.”
Steel Club has its own 18-hole disc golf course. An annual membership to the course costs $360.
“We have done our best to create a gold level professional course, not only to challenge the best players in the world, but to also allow golfers on all levels a place to test their skills,” Steel Club’s website reads.
Tickets to this weekend’s event are available through Eventbrite. General admission tickets are $10 for Thursday’s practice round and $20 for the rounds on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. A 4-day general admission pass is available for $50. VIP passes are also available.
Steel Club is also in need of volunteers for this weekend’s event. More information about volunteering can be found on their website.
Spectator and event information for the tournament can be found on the Disc Golf Pro Tour website.
Below is the tournament’s full schedule:
Thursday
10 a.m. – Gates open to spectators
12 p.m. – Skins match
Friday
9 a.m. – Gates open to spectators
10-11:30 a.m. – Men’s match 1 tee times
2-4 p.m. – Men’s match 2 tee times
Saturday
9 a.m. – Gates open to spectators
10-11:30 a.m. – Men’s match 3 tee times
2-3:30 p.m. – Men’s and women’s Elite 8
Sunday
9 a.m. – Gates open to spectators
10 & 11 a.m. – Men’s and women’s Final Four
2 p.m. – Men’s and women’s championship
Parking for the event will be located at 2101 Wassergass Road, Hellertown, PA 18055.
Two years ago, it was a dream, an idea that, if realized, would bring something new to Jefferson County as well as visitors to the county’s Ogeechee Crossing Park. That something new is disc golf. Players throw a flying disc toward a target. The number of throws a player uses to hit the target are tallied; and, the player with the fewest throws wins.
Henry Hamilton, owner of Adrenaline Heaven Sports, designed the course and will be the tournament director for the first disc golf tournament at Ogeechee Crossing. This inaugural match will be held Saturday, Oct. 30, and is a one-day event.
The targets at Ogeechee’s disc golf course are elevated metal baskets, the most common target.
As in ball golf or club golf, players must make consecutive throws from the point where the disc from the previous throw lands. Different obstacles such as trees and water challenge the players throughout the course.
Hamilton said the growth of this sport has been “phenomenal.” Standards for play have been established by the Professional Disc Golf Association (PDGA), which has sanctioned this event. The association set guidelines and classifications for the game.
“Professionals play for money. Amateurs play for trophies,” he said.
“This is all new to us,” said Park Coordinator Robert Yonchak. “We hope we get a good crowd.”
There will be a food vendor onsite. Yonchak said the tournament is an all day event and will happen “rain or shine.”
Jefferson County Commission Chairman Mitchell McGraw said the commissioners started a few years ago trying to find something different for people to do. Yonchak said the idea for disc golf started with local citizens; and, it became a team effort.
“It’s been a fun project to do,” McGraw said, adding it has brought a lot of excitement to Jefferson County.
“I’m grateful we got the grant,” he continued referring to a recreation grant the county received to assist in the cost of building the park.
“I’m just excited for our county to have this. There’s ecitement right now; and, I think there’ll be more excitement later,” McGraw said.
To register to play in the tournament, visit pdga.com and click the following: tournament schedule, October 2021, Oct. 30, Ogeechee Crossing Open, online registration. Registration ends Wednesday, Oct. 27, at 8 p.m.
There is a cost associated with participation in the tournament, but there is no cost for spectators. Spectators may bring fold up lawn chairs.
The park is located at 1928 TE Buchannon Road and 1755 Hwy 171 (Grange Road), Louisville.