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I think his relative strengths are scramble game and course management, so I expect him to do about the same.
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1002 ...nice
Congratulations to Brodie |
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Does the PDGA make fancy little deals like that for every player who breaks 1000? Or is it just popular ones?
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I don't think of Brodie as being good at playing to his strengths on a particular course, but I do think of him as being good at playing to his strengths in general. The scoober is an example of this. He has a shot that was rarely used in DG but common in ultimate. He realized that it was an excellent DG shot for him because of its accuracy and the ability to stay near the basket when he misses. This shot allows him to play within his game but still throw really high-level shots. I'm not sure if he's learned this from hanging out with Paul so much or if it comes natural to him, but I see it translate to other parts of his game too. So my question is how do you see him altering his game for specific layouts? |
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I think he has a very good mind for the game. And I think he knows his limitations. He might never beat all of them on a given week, but he is going to routinely beat people with superior skills because they take more risks and those risks don't pay off. |
Brodie seems interesting because he's both a Noob and very much not.
Brodie comes into DG as a scratch golfer, so he's already got a better golf knowledge than many of us started with, and as a world class ultimate player so there's already disc throwing mechanics even if they need to be changed for DG vs an ultimate Lid. It's been fun to see his improvement over the last year because there's that "Oh if I could dedicate my full days to DG and had access to Paul Mcbeth I could be 1000 rated in a year too" But at the same time, Brodie has a lot of background that is presumably helping him get proficient as quickly as he did. |
Brodie is interesting to me purely as a case study in what an elite ultimate player can do once he gets old and transitions to disc golf if he does it full time. Its pretty much gone as expected, though, so I can't really say I'm still very interested on more than an "Oh, that's neat he's still rolling" sort of way.
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Curious as to how many of those people have their own threads on this forum, or sell out discs with their logo on them within minutes. This is how professional sports works. |
Taylor Brooks is semi-local here. He played for the New York Empire for a few years and is now an up and comer in Virginia disc golf rated 983 as of now.
Fish was also a pretty accomplished Ultimate player and now one of the best dg'ers in the world. He will still tell you he prefers Ultimate. |
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Remind me again of how many youtube views Ezra has? Set your hate aside for a short time and look at this from a business standpoint, if it doesn't make sense to you then you aren't paying attn. |
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Ezra finished 22nd at the Memorial and Brodie finished tied for 23rd. Brodie's scores were a bit more consistent the last three rounds. Ezra started hot and faded a bit the last couple of rounds.
BOth are still off to good starts to their season. Ezra is younger and has the higher potential of course. |
Just listened to the Brodie episode of Nate Sexton's podcast today. I thought it was great. Honestly believe Brodie's in it for the right reasons and that he has something to offer to growing the sport. I thought the interview was pretty insightful.
Brodie strikes me as a guy who is a bit egotistical but legit has a good heart. And I gotta respect his hustle. He's improved so much in a year. I'm not gonna go out and buy all of his tour series discs, but I'm rooting for him. |
What if Ezra and Brodie represent what happened to MMA once high-level amateur wrestlers started getting involved (e.g. Matt Hughes, Mark Coleman).
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I find myself having a very hate/like relationship with how I feel about Brodie. Half the time when he opens his mouth I just want to tell him to shut up you whiny b****. Or I see some of his videos that make me absolutely cringe (lets laugh at rollers thrown into a kids playground, near people, for instance). But the other half of the time, I see a guy who genuinely loves the sport. A guy working hard to get what he wants. An athlete not afraid to speak their mind and challenge some of the "that's just the way it is" things. I respect the hell out of that. He was also fantastic on that podcast. Idk how I feel. I liked him at the start, hated him in the middle. Now maybe I'm net-zero neutral? I'm probably never rooting for him, and still probably wouldn't care at all if he failed, but maybe I'm just no longer rooting against him? Anyone else feel like this? |
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Even though I've grown to respect him, there are certainly things that irk me about him. Whining to the public about other people's actions has never been a good look for anyone, especially someone who's already known as brash. On the other hand, most people on here probably think I'm a fanboy based on how I post about him. I'm very willing to point out that other people are critical of him without being critical of themselves. Succeed or fail, he's brought more $$$ to disc golf. Idk how much, but I'm not complaining. Now hopefully it'll result in more/better courses. |
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I had mixed reactions to the podcast with Nate. I thought there was some insightful discussion but I got particularly irked during the Q&A section about tour series disc and the secondary disc market. The question was essentially, "What do you think about it?" and he went off on this long unrelated tangent about player payouts that felt pretty forced to me. Almost like that topic is his schtick and he needed to find a way to bring it up to create some kind of artificial controversy. I think Nate generally agreed with him, but it didn't seem like Brodie really listened when Nate would say something like "Well you gotta consider... yada-yada-yada". On a different note, I was surprised to see him get a top-25 finish at LVC but I'm particularly interested to see how his game holds up at Waco. I'm watching him play a practice round with Jeff Korns on the Foundation YouTube channel and gotta say, I don't think he's gonna fare well this weekend. I think he's got enough distance to compete on bomber courses but doesn't seem to have the control (yet) to compete on tight wooded courses. That's my guess at least, we'll see how it goes this weekend. Interestingly, he didn't mention his control or woods game being a weakness in the Nate interview, which I would have expected. He just said he needs more distance and consistency. |
Brodie Smith on Pardon My Take
I haven’t finished listening to his interview yet but so far it’s pretty neat. He definitely doesn’t know the history of the growth like those of us who have been in but overall he’s portraying the super really positively.
https://open.spotify.com/episode/691...SJKpAD24HAekBg |
Nice. I will give this a listen sometime this weekend while doing some yard work.
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1018 in the first round.
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As far as outscoring high rated players, this is by far his best round. Tied Hammes and Conrad. Got Eagle, KJ, Gurthie, Orum, AB, Uli, Feldberg, etc, etc, etc, etc. One stroke off Paul, Dickerson, Gibson, etc.
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