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The dude is creating every opportunity to walk away and blame it on the players/sport |
I googled it because I was curious...
https://twitter.com/Brodiesmith21/st...7Ctwgr%5Etweet A bunch of nothing to me. I wouldn't really call that "all upset". All upset is more like vlog rant in a car or something, IMO. With that said, I kind of love it. I don't really think Brodie has the resume to be a rival to a top player, but I want to see rivalries in disc golf. I love the Uli stories about how top players slighted him. I love how Saints pass rusher Cam Jordan retweeted that Buccaneers offensive tackle Donovan Smith opted back in this season and said that was great news. |
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Whoever posted the meme on Insta sounds like someone I need to follow lol |
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https://www.instagram.com/p/CJ1Q0ABp-9D/ |
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Eric Oakley also liked it. Yeah I think Brodie could lighten up a bit. People do this sort of thing because they know they can get a reaction out of him. |
That is hilarious. Thanks for the link.
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lol 1825 likes in 22 hours.
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https://twitter.com/Brodiesmith21/st...206896133?s=20
Let's see how long this lasts. Hopefully a very long time. I think a positive Brodie is way better for the sport than a negative one. |
It doesn't matter if Brodie is positive or negative. He's not going to bring the sport into the mainstream. If you know who Brodie Smith is, chances are you already knew what disc golf was before he started playing. All he is is a prima donna who thinks he needs people's respect because he's Brodie Smith. He hasn't won anything of note.
Brodie will be as much responsible for the popularity of the sport as the movie Chains was. :| |
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Time will tell, I wish him luck. |
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https://i.imgur.com/qfXqpZU.png |
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Does anyone know when Chains is dropping? |
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But that's really just me. |
I don't hate them, nor are either in my favorite two or three players... I do want to see how they compete this year... McBeth should be fully back from injury and to see if Brodie can get some top twenty finishes at top events.
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I don't hold Paul accountable for sticking up for Brodie. He probably should have just stayed out of it, but they're pals, and you take up for your pal when someone gives them a hard time. I still maintain that Brodie needs to lighten up. No, Paul is not in my personal favorite 3 MPO players, but he's the Michael Jordan of disc golf. The only reason it gets boring watching him is because every single throw is perfect. |
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I tweeted at McBeth and Uli about Ezra, and Brodie was already on the case. Good looks Brodie, showing up for your new teammate.
I now have a fantasy about Brodie saving his image by becoming best buds with Ezra. Brodie unlocks Ezra's true competitive spirit, and Ezra teaches Brodie a thing or two about just being chill. |
Brodie is a hot take machine...
It's actually not a bad idea in some situations. Sure, it would be nice to widen tee pads to give players a bit more creativity off the tee pad. But when the cost question is asked he responds with "well just have the DGPT pay for it." Uh huh...where is that money going to come from? I love how people can come up with great ideas like this but fail to recognize what it takes to make something like that happen. We're talking a minimum of $3k per course the DGPT would have to cough up - even if its only half the tee pads that are expanded or whatever he's talking about. "Ok Brodie...we'll do and pay for the improvements you want but the cost is coming out of the MPO/FPO payouts." Wonder how that would go over... -Dave |
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I think he needs to take care of that lip first and foremost :gross:
There's many different aspects involved with this though. Toboggan is a temp course only with rubber tees. That'd be a no go even to get concrete tees. The Memorial, which I can't remember if it was an NT or DGPT stop, has some tees that added onto a sidewalk. Others are giant concrete circles. The Preserve has turf style tees. Maple hill has brick tees, etc. He should probably play more than a handful of events before deciding what's "best" for disc golf. |
How is it a hot take to say "how about we move the teepads?", or "why aren't all teepads made from concrete?", or "can't we just standardize the teepads?" because even though I've only been playing disc golf for a short while I've heard those questions dozens of times.
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I found this tweet hilariously ironic. I thought Brodie was living his best. Apparently not, if you believe this.....
Because Lord knows he wants ALL of us to know what he's doing and thinking at ALL times. |
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And it's not like the disc golfers are the only ones out there on that course during the offseason. I see people hiking and running those hills all year long, there are crossfit and hiking groups out there often. Cement teepads themselves aren't exactly some environmental disaster and they can always be removed down the road should issues arise. Tree loss and erosion are much bigger issues than that and they can be mitigated by pulling baskets/closing course off. |
It’s not a dumb take, but also nothing new (not that he was claiming it was). That example he gave “I had been throwing the big sweeping hyzer but when they installed the tee, I couldn’t throw that any more!” Well, yea. The designer put the tee in that spot for a reason. If they don’t want you to throw a hyzer, then they can put the tee in a spot that prevents it.
Like others have said, moving the basket is much easier and cheaper than building a new tee. Some tournaments move the basket to a few locations through the rounds. Probably a lot more could. Quote:
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If serious about replacing tee pads for DGPT courses...well, that is just short sighted in some cases. What is best for the few handful of DGPT players may not be best for the population of golfers that play the course for 51 of the other weeks of the year. |
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supposedly something like this is what he's talking about:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Eshi8LTX...=jpg&name=orig for one I think it doesn't "look" nice at all, and for wooded courses (like Brewster Ridge) I really don't know how feasible that would be |
I think I started a thread about this years back, not sure what happened to it. It doesn't make sense for most holes on most courses I don't think, but occasionally it could be a design feature. *Shrugs*
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I think having a minimum length and width (and flatness or limited construction materials/methods?) for all teedpads is a good idea, perhaps even a mandated safe follow-through pad extension would be good, but I don't agree with some of the vague ideas mentioned on Showmez Ep2 where they were mentioning a 20' pad or having the pad be always free of any branches etc.
I watched Brodie's video but I couldn't quite grasp what the suggestion was, was it that the pad always extends a certain width? I do feel like it's not a bad time for the PDGA to start talking about some standardisation for teepads with the plan that it comes into play in a few year's time. Teepads need repair/replacement/repositioning from time to time so giving time for courses that want to host the bigger tournaments time to comply with some clear guidelines seems like a good step forward. |
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We have a local course that has two distinctly different pads and baskets that make four possible and interesting layouts.
There is never just a pad that is Only shorter, it’s usually a different and sometimes harder angle. I don’t like the idea of a second pad being super close like the above image. However I think the main issue is not every course is set up or even can get permission to put in concrete everywhere. I fought with one local park over the idea of concrete pads for years and they don’t want anything on the land that couldn’t be removed easily. That could be an issue many places(Toboggan, Milo and Golf courses spring to mind). |
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While we (mostly) all agree bigger, flatter tee-pads are better, how big and flat should they be? 4'x8'? 6'x12' 8'x16'? Round or rectangular? Concrete or turf.... I would imagine this would require a statistical analysis of ideal tee conditions and how they impact play for the widest range of players possible, maybe in addition to thorough player survey. Perhaps this is already been done. It doesn't make sense to me to arbitrarily say lets put up the dollars to make them ALL X ft wide by X ft long without corresponding data to quantify the benefit of the standardized tee dimensions. I agree with brodie that nice, standardized teepads would be great, but I feel there is a great deal of research and analysis to be done to provide an actual Cost-Benefit analysis. |
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