Flip wrote:Did you end up picking up your teammates for the trip?
Nope, it was decided that we were all trying to do each other a favor when none was really needed. No feelings were hard and a good time was had by all.
Lox wrote:Ultimate is fun. I'm decently good. I'd be better if I played more often and had a bit more stamina. Both would be improved by joining some kind of league.
<a href="
http://www.google.com/search?q=maryland ... S:official">
There's probably already a league or weekly pickup happening somewhere near you.</a>
Mental wrote:Interesting. I didn't know you played Ultimate.
I've mentioned it a couple times before, but that was back when you weren't around much.
Anyway, Ultimate is basically my passion in life (even more than gaming). I've been playing since I was 14, I absolutely love it, and am trying to improve myself enough so that I can make a Nationals-caliber team (thus being an elite player myself).
All of my workouts are essentially in order to get/keep myself in shape for disc, I play year-round (outdoor from April to November, and indoor the rest of the year), and I've traveled to tournaments all over the country (the furthest I've been was a tourney in Phoenix this past January).
Mental also wrote:Do you guys use the non-traditional-toss throws, like the overhead or outside throws?
There are three basic throws that everybody ends up learning - the forehand, the backhand, and the hammer.
The forehand and backhand look much like their tennis counterparts - I'm throwing a backhand in the "pull" pictures, and am throwing a forehand <a href="
http://rima.smugmug.com/gallery/593071/ ... 9">here</a> and <a href="
http://rima.smugmug.com/gallery/593071/ ... 5">here</a>.
The hammer is an overhead throw that is thrown with the disc nearly vertical, and it ends up curving towards the throwing hand (i.e. a righty hammer will curve to the right and vice versa) and flattening out so that it ends up upside down.
There are a bunch of other throws - scoober, thumber, blade, etc. - but you don't see them much outside of playing catch, pickup games, or mega-elite level competition.
Mental also also wrote:...the Stanford Ultimate team is driven by ex-varsity athletes who want to play a sport without the pressure of high-level collegiate competition.
Considering that Stanford is one of the perennial powerhouses in college ultimate (at Nationals this year, the men's team lost to eventual champion Brown in the semis and the women's team won the whole thing), that's not quite the way it is.
A few years ago, college ultimate teams were mostly made up of high school athletes who couldn't get scholarships in their high school sports (mostly soccer/track & field) and guys who didn't go to school for athletics in the first place but who were athletic and wanted to play a sport.
Those types of players still make up the majority of college teams, but these days there's more of a presence of high school athletes who specifically played ultimate in high school and went to a certain college specifically for ultimate (schools like Brown, Stanford, Cal, and Colorado spring to mind), as well as athletes who want to play a sport and not have to deal with all of the BS that comes with playing an officially sanctioned college sport - i.e. having to deal with being part of the athletic department and having your budget, schedule, uniforms et al decided for you. Even at the top schools, ultimate is still a club sport, which means the players have the freedom to run the program however they want to.
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