Archive for the ‘Tournaments’ Category

Memorial – Day Three

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Back to the Fountain and a chance to redeem myself a little. I just feel more comfortable at this course, the layout is more open and the danger is more obvious. The majority of holes have an obvious straight or hyzer route, so I’m not having to pull off any big turnover shots.

So I came in today aiming for a 50, I replayed a lot of the bad holes in my head and tried to work out some new strategies to clean them up a little. Unfortunately, I started out by drowning my first drive again. I had a good drive and solid upshot on two, but chickened out on the death putt for birdie 3 chaining out right. Putting was my nemesis today, but I know that is a direct result of my lack of practice. If I intend to compete in this sport, I need to commit the practice time. At this point, any putt inside the circle, even with a little wind, should be relatively automatic.

I’ve noticed, as have many of my friends that I play with, that my putts usually have just enough to get there. In short, I putt to the basket instead of through it. I’ve spent some time analyzing the causes and effects of that. My meek putting style never leaves me with a challenging comeback putt, but more often than not, it also means that my initial putt didn’t have a chance. I’m going to have to build my putting confidence and learn to be more aggressive.

I did, however, can a long jumper on one of the elevated baskets. My upshots were pretty short again today, which left me in less-than-ideal position for the majority of my putts. I also need to start planning my upshots better such that I can be more free to run them. Things like making sure I don’t leave myself with OB directly behind the basket, or tricky sidehill shots with a high likelihood of roll-away.

I would have to say the highlight of my day came on hole 17, which had a tall palm tree marked as a mando on the left side of the fairway. Another palm of identical height and distance off the tee stood about 3 feet right of it creating a tiny window. I ended up releasing my drive about a second early in my swing and launched it on a stiff hyzer going right at the mando tree. Since missing the mando meant a re-tee, I was relieved when it decided to flatten out at the last second and split the gap between the trees. A small gallery that was watching the 3-hole junction at that end of the course oooohed and ahhhed a bit and I got a small round of applause (and laughter). A little old lady standing near the tee smiled at me and said ‘I bet you can’t do that again…’. Definitely a good laugh. I ended up getting a lucky par on that hole, which could have easily wrecked an otherwise OK round.

Still, I scored fairly well and stayed out of the OB for the most part. I improved on most of the holes I faltered on during Wednesday’s round, but shorted myself on others. Overall, I probably played too conservatively considering how far down in the standings I was after Thursday’s catastrophe.

Either way, I really enjoy playing at the Fountain and am looking forward to next year. I hope I’ll be able to swing a little more time off so that I can get some practice in ahead of time.

Definitely not looking forward to tomorrow. Not only is it another round at the dreaded Vista, but it means this tourney adventure is coming to an end and it’s back to work :(

Here We Go Again!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

So I’ve just arrived in Phoenix for the 2010 Discraft Memorial. I’ll be playing one round each day for the next four days. Two at Fountain Hills, two at Vista Del Camino. I tee off at 11:14am tomorrow with two-time world champ, Barry Schultz and Paul McBeth, both of whom are rated almost 100 points higher than I. I’ll be honest, it’s more than a little intimidating! Especially because I tee off first.. Fortunately, I’ve gotten a lot of kind words of encouragement from my Mile High friends and the fine folks from Nutsac.

Just gotta play some smart golf and stay within my abilities. I have to be honest with myself, with this stacked of a field, last cash is a lofty goal! Still, if I stay outta the OB and hit my putts, no reason I can’t start the season off with a 1000-rater!

It’s been a long cold winter in Denver and, although I’ve played several fundraiser and non-sanctioned events, I’m feelin pretty rusty! That, combined with the altitude difference will make for quite a challenge tomorrow. I’ve brought a pretty wide variety of discs with me as i still haven’t travelled enough to predict stability. My instincts are telling me that I should modify my release angle, not my disc choice. I think more than anything I’m going to focus most on making good decisions and will compromise distance for accuracy and safety. I am more likely to score well by avoiding bogies than I am running risky shots for low-percentage birdies.

Either way, I am super-excited about being able to play some warm weather golf and catch up with old friends. If anyone wants to keep up with the action, a live pay-per-view webcast is available at www.discgolfplanet.tv

stay tuned to see what tomorrow brings!! Wish me luck :)

2009 CO State Championships

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

IMG_0081
As you can see the course was awesome! The baskets were painted blue and topped with a Colorado state flag. The only thing wrong with this weekend, besides the light snow on the first day, was my awful, awful playing.

I had good groups all three rounds, but I just couldn’t get it going. I narrowly escaped being dead last. On the upside, the cabin we rented was awesome and I got a chance to hang out with a few other touring pros, Cale Leiviska and Paul Ulibarri. Both were super nice and fun to chill with.

I really hope this downward trend in my game goes away soon. Perhaps it’s just a side-effect of the stress of my impending wedding on Halloween :)

Snow Mountain Challenge

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

Well, I think I can safely say this was the worst tourney performance I’ve had yet this year. Certainly not the TD’s fault! The courses were awesome and everything ran super-smooth. The only problem was that I was working until 4am the day of the tournament. Got home at 5am, got in the car at 6am, drove 2 hours to Winter Park and teed off around 9am. If were not for my absolute love of the game and abundant sense of humor, I would have just curled up under a tree and passed out. The first course (YMCA Rockies) has been absolutely decimated by the dang pine beetles. It was a layout that I would have totally loved if I had even just a few hours sleep.

The second course was pretty cool, it was at the top of the Winter Park ski resort and played about halfway down the hill. A few downhill bombs mixed with challenging uphills and winding woods shots. I really liked it, just wish I could’ve had some rest beforehand.

On the morning of the second day, I split my head open on the TV stand at the hotel. The round didn’t get much better :( Oh well, gotta have the bad round to make the good ones look better. The other bummer of the weekend is that my fiancee and a bunch of good friends were injured in an alpine slide crash after the round. We were able to use our lift tickets to ride the slide down. I got down fine, but a light rain started while they were halfway down. The brakes are useless when the track is wet and they all crashed into each other at the bottom. Fortunately it was just bumps, scrapes and bruises for her and my friends, but some others weren’t so lucky, some bones were definitely broken :(

2009 Vibram Open – Day 3

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

Well, cause of yesterday’s performance (or lack thereof), I had the unparalleled pleasure of caddying for my friend Jay Reading this afternoon. Man, what a nice guy. It was really fun to walk the round with these guys and see the lines and the shots without the pressure of competing. It’s quite an interesting perspective! Jay had a couple of bummers, especially hole 12, but pulled out a pretty darn good round. I think it really says a lot for a player’s game when the can recover from a particularly bad hole and face the next one with a smile. I can learn a lot from that :)

I can’t wait to play this tourney next year. I would put this and Roscoe’s Revenge as the two best tourneys I’ve played in (besides the Japan Open, of course). I think I’m already going into ‘Vibram Withdrawl’

2009 Vibram Open – Day 2

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Well, today didn’t quite go as expected :( I just wasn’t getting it done. I definitely improved on some holes I struggled with yesterday, but a few bad kicks and just plain bad shots put me just short of the cut and thus, out of the cash :( On the plus side, I pulled off that ridiculous hyzerbomb upshot on hole 18 again. I’d say the highlight of my day was campin out on 18′s green and watching the rest of the field come in.

2009 Vibram Open – Round 1

Friday, August 14th, 2009

hole 17 at maple hillUgh! What a day! Started off with a short-arm into the pond for a six, and it didn’t get much better. The only highlights of my day were a near-deuce on 16, which is ridiculous.. and planting a 350′ uphill sky hyzer over the barn on 18 for birdie, almost canned it :) There was a pretty big gallery up there and they all went nuts when it landed, that was sweet!

Still, I hit a ton of ceilings and cabbage, really need to learn to look UP before throwing approach shots. Tomorrow is going to be better. Chances of making the cut are slim, but ya never know.

Still in shock that Barry shot what he did, even with a six in there… that is just plain nuts!

2009 Vibram Open – Practice Day 3 & Dubs

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

I’m gonna keep this one short, as I have a big day ahead of me tomorrow. We got in a rather damp practice round today, then got to watch all the dubs action. I suppose I’m gonna be all over the DVD as I was in the gallery for most of all three dubs rounds. It was super fun to watch, although I’ll admit I was hopin to see a bit more exciting play. I think the ladies were my favorite as their attitudes were relaxed and their shots smoother. Not to say that the guys weren’t playing good golf, just that the ladies were a bit more fun to be around.

Player’s meeting was pretty cool, we all met in the big barn and they had a huge box of little apple pies for everyone. Because I got in off the waitlist, my player’s package wasn’t ready yet, but Steve said they’ll be in tomorrow. We each get a sweet tourney collared shirt with our name and state embroidered on it! I think we also get a vibram putter and some other cool shwag.

I’m gonna try to get some zz’s as were gonna throw the front nine at Pyramids for warmup tomorrow! I know the focus is on Maple Hill these days, but I’ve always wanted to play that course, even if just for a warmup. Man, I’m like a kid in a candy store! A giant, muddy candy store filled with trees, ponds and baskets :D

Think happy thoughts for tomorrow, I’m gonna need it :oP

2009 Vibram Open – Practice Day 2

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

I had a great start to the day. Greg sent me a brand-spankin new BLACK DOUBLE NUTSAC!!! It looks freakin sweet. Steve Dodge delivered it to me just as Mitch and I were getting outta the car to start our second practice round. I’m gonna transfer all my gear into it tonight and take it for a test drive tomorrow!

This newer model includes a few alterations that I had suggested, specifically improved suspension and a snap to collapse the 2nd compartment if only carrying a few discs. It really looks sharp in black!

So I got the pleasure of playing a practice round with Jay and Des Reading, definitely two of my favorite tourin pros! We had a great time! I forget the hole number, but there was one that both Jay and I were havin a hard time with. We had noone behind us so we informally agreed that we weren’t leavin until we hit the gap and put it in deuce range. We took turns shankin, fading early, grounding out, hittin trees. Jay finally got one through putting it high and right, leaving about a 40′er. I had littered the hole with most of my favorite mids to no avail. The group said ‘keep goin till ya get it’, then someone added ‘but what if it starts rainin’. That was apparently all the motivation I needed. I threw my fave QMS straight down the gut, skipped twice and stopped about 25′ short, CTP! Hope I can remember what I did so I can do it again come Friday :)

Missed out on dubs qualifier visiting a friend in Connecticut. Ended up playin a few rounds of darts later in the evening, at which I am proud to say I am still undefeated! Mitch, Yeti and Cuz each put up good fights, but my bar league days came through :)

We’re plannin another practice round in the morning and then gonna spectate dubs. Should be some exciting golf. I’ll try to get some pictures up!

:) The Chad

2009 Vibram Open – Practice Day 1

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

So I’m in Leicester, MA for the 2009 Vibram Open, the last stop on the 2009 National Tour. The field is absolutely stacked and the course shows no mercy! Got a good practice round in today with my friend Mitch, who has a lot of experience on this course and a good chance to place high in the pack.

A good deal of water and trees come in to play on this course, but all the shots are fair. You just really have to commit to your shot and hit your line or the results can be devastating. There are a few open bombs that you’ll need a good arm and solid throw to have a chance at. However, the holes in the woods are a different story altogether. I was trying all kinds of silly angles with various drivers and eventually determined that I really have to choose which holes to ‘go for’ and which to play smart.

I definitely have issues with controlled distance. If I want to make the cut, I’m going to have to stay in control in the woods. So that means midranges. I’m going to be relying heavily on my QMS (Quantum Midrange-Straight by Millennium for those unfamiliar). There is no point in trying to crush something 450′ down a gap only to drill a tree 50′ off the pad and skip 80′ into the woods. If I can get a safe par on those holes, I’ll take it.

On a similar note, it really is a pleasure to play true par 4 holes. Park and putt gets old after a while. Having to get over a hill or through a gap and then turn the corner for a 150′ approach is a different kind of golf than i’m used to. I was once advised to travel if I ever wanted to advance my game. That is great advice!

Anyway, we joined the local random-draw doubles league tonight. I was paired with a real nice fella named Chris. He single-handedly eagled hole 3, which is no small feat. It’s a par 4 up and over a hill ending left on the back slope through thick woods. He buttered his drive and it faded perfectly leaving a 60′ jumper which he hit! I pulled off a few shots of my own, although he carried me through most of the tougher holes. Still, we took my drive on hole #18, which was a little short and left but in the open. I yanked a sky hyzer into the woodchips left of the bucket and hit the 40′ putt for bird. We played well into dusk and the last few holes were almost crapshoots. We ended up shooting a 55, and doubling our money. Not bad considering all the 1000-raters in the field :)

Tomorrow: Practice Day #2, Dubs Qualifier