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Get him and AJ and call it Bromez…:|
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No, Ricky and PP would be worse. |
Brodie and Hannah tie, after 9 fairly easy holes. To me he looks like MA2 level. |
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Or FPO maybe? |
I haven't watched that one yet but him tying Hannah, isn't that surprising really. SHe doesn't have any real distance to speak of but is pretty consistent for the most part off the tee. As far as him being at an MA2 level, he's still extremely wild off the tee and has only a basic understanding about what disc or shot shape to throw in a given situation. I was playing for roughly 4yrs when I starting throwing 400ish flex shots on flat ground and still never made it above 890. I'd say he's doing pretty well so far.
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He's really putting it together fast. 1000 rated in a year doesn't seem out of reach.
Also Hannah seems like such a beautiful soul. Paul picked a winner. |
I am really enjoying this last set of videos. Brodie has good energy and is doing a great job of explaining his "journey". Hannah is sweet and cheerful and a good opponent/partner for him at this point. And Paul is doing some great coaching/discussion/observation. I'll bet that these videos are exposing a lot of folks to disc golf as well as to Paul/Hannah.
And, I'm not finding Brodie to be over the top or obnoxious. He's learning fast and apparently having some fun. |
What's really crazy was the live chat had 4000 people. How many people were watching live tournaments last year?
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That last video was great. Paul doing color and Brodie learning the game... I found it entertaining and educational. I would enjoy it more however if they were throwing Innova.
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Uhhhh .... Now do one Brodie vs Hannah around the house
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Nice video..i really liked Pauls coaching
I must admit that after +20y of playing i did not know that you was not allowed to touch the basket when you tap out |
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Maybe this is paul's interpretation of "the thrower must release the disc" with the idea being if you are still holding your disc and your disc touches the basket. Then you would probably have a contact point in front of your lie. |
Once Brodie truly understands disc selection, disc manipulation and angle control, he will be a force. His form will come quickly, it's the disc iq that takes time. Little things like knowing to throw a flippy fairway on hyzer instead of a stable fairway on hyzer in certain situations is an example of shots that take time to fully comprehend. Having Paul, and eventually other pros, there to explain these things will certainly help expedite this.
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I used to agree with what Paul said, but now I'm not so sure. Here's why:
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If someone was a few feet away and could put their disc in the basket, point their arm up straight, bend 90 degrees at the elbow, stretch their toes behind their lie, and then say they'd holed out, I'm sure they'd be called. Beyond that, it doesn't seem to be illegal. |
Can someone give the timecode to what part of the video all this rules talk is referring to thatd be great. Sure not going to watch the entire video.
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The ironic thing is, we already had this discussion last week in the AnhyzerTV thread in the rules forum.
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Two scenarios where your lie is a foot away from the edge of the basket: 1 - You're reaching into the basket, holding the disc, and the disc is touching the inside of the basket. You release the disc into the basket. This is LEGAL. 2 - You're reaching into the basket, holding the disc, and your hand/wrist/arm is touching the rim of the basket. You release the disc while your body is still in contact with the basket. This is ILLEGAL. Scenario 1 is what Paul is referring to. It seems close to being illegal, but it's not quite. You can touch the ground or basket or trees in front of you all you want before you release the disc. The only time that matters is the precise moment when the disc is released. If you're holding the disc, and the disc is touching the basket, but then release it, then at the moment of release you're no longer holding the disc any more, so there's no contact in front of your lie. Did you release the disc first and then cease making contact second? Or did you cease making contact first and release the disc second? As far as the PDGA is concerned, it's simultaneous and we allow it. It's kind of like the ground causing a fumble in football. Did you fumble first and hit the ground second? Or did you hit the ground first and fumble second? They're simultaneous, so the rules just take a stance on it. QA-COM-1 Q: If I have a drop-in, do I need to throw the disc in, or can I just place it in the tray and let go? A: You can place it in the tray, but you must release it and let it come to rest before retrieving it. A release is a required part of a throw, so merely touching the chains or the tray with your putter is not a throw and does not complete the hole. |
I've watched a couple of these Brodie videos finally with Paul and Hanna. He's really not as annoying as some folks are making him out to be. There are guys that show up to my leagues that are WAY more annoying than that and plus it just seems like he's just relaxed and having fun with the game.
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There are times that he gets a bit loud, the video that he made with Simon and Paul that started this has a few of those moments. He also has that thing a lot of new players have where they are overly impressed with great shots by really good players. I am still guilty of that on occasion even after playing close to 10 years. In general, I agree with you, he's just having a good time but I can see where he might rub people the wrong way. Same thing happens with Nikko to a degree. Some guys are just better at keeping their emotions under wraps than others.
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Brodie is doing just fine for someone who has played the game for less than 3 months. His ultimate background gives him some good familiarity with the skill set necessary to throw all the shots. For a player with that little experience playing disc golf to tie a 916 rated FPO player is not bad at all. However, that's really not good enough for MPO. 916 rated players can't even compete at local C-tier tournaments, let alone NT and DGPT events where the best of the best come to play MPO. I don't see this going well for Brodie if he is dead set on playing MPO for the upcoming season.
Most people are laughably bad at disc golf when they are as new to the game as Brodie currently is. I expect that he will continue to get better as the year progresses but I doubt he will make a legit push at a 1000 rating any time soon. With time he should become a solid pro, but it may take a few years to get the familiarity with the discs to master all the shots needed to be a legit MPO caliber player. The man looks like an athlete and has a good build for disc golf, but I think people need to pump the brakes on the "He's gonna be 1000 rated at years end" crap. |
I could see him maybe shooting a few 1ks towards the end of the year, especially if his putting continues to improve like it has been. Any player with the distance he already has can get hot and shoot a great round or two if they're making putts. As far as averaging 1k, it would be rather difficult especially if he struggles a little out of the gate.
Its really all just conjecture at this point, since he hasn't even registered for an event yet. He has to actually compete and get a 900+ rating before he can even play in a NT/DGPT event on the pro side. Maybe he shows up and plays AM1 for some? |
He is very productive, two videos in 18h . . .more videos in a week than most discgolf pros makes in a year
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Has there ever been this level of hype for a disc golfer before their 1st rated round? I can't imagine there has been.
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In the scenario being discussed the disc isn't considered a supporting point, it is considered an object that provides support. See bolded bit below. Quote:
And also, it doesn't matter how much weight you are putting through a supporting point, if you are in contact with it, it is providing support. Sent from my Pixel using Tapatalk |
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Really starting to wonder what disc golf content he'll have once the season starts? :popcorn:
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However, in your second paragraph above, I'm not sure I agree. You're describing a "contacting point". Why wouldn't the rules say that instead of supporting point? A supporting point would, by definition, be a point that supports. Can you clarify? |
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Objects that provide support: the ground, a tree, a rock, the basket. Objects that don't provide support: tall grass, leaves, spiderwebs. If you are making contact with an object that provides (or, essentially is capable of providing) support, then it's a supporting point. I'd extend that to secondary contact as well - that is, if you're holding an object, and that object is touching something that provides support. That could be you leaning on a crutch that's supported on the ground, or holding a stick that's touching the ground, or holding a disc that's touching the basket. What does not count as a supporting point is if your arm makes incidental contact with weeds, tall grass, or leaves as you're swinging your arm. |
To me its like putting an UFC fighter in a ring with a boxer... and tell him hes gotta box. No matter how much you train him for boxing, hes got boxers to beat.
Will be interesting to see for sure. |
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The definition of a supporting point actually uses the word contact: Quote:
And the Q&A section users the same language: Quote:
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Thanks guys. I see what you're saying, and at the same time, I wish the rules were clearer. "that provides support" is vague, both in the meaning of the phrase and the construction of the sentence.
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