Disc golf, also known as frisbee golf, is played much like golf. Instead of a ball and clubs, though, players use a flying disc. The object of the game is completing each hole in the fewest throws.
A golf disc is thrown from a tee area to a target usually being a metal basket. Different discs are used like golf has different clubs. Each disc is weighted differently and fly at different speeds and distances. As a player progresses down the fairway, he or she must make each consecutive throw from the spot where the previous throw landed. The sometimes hard terrain such as trees and brush changes located in and around the fairways provide challenging obstacles for the golfer. Finally, the "putt" lands in the basket and the hole is completed.
There are four main types of disc golf discs. Choosing the right type of disc for the right situation can make all the difference in your score!
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Distance Drivers
Distance Drivers, as their name suggests, have the greatest potential to travel the greatest distance. However, they also require the greatest speed to travel true to their intended flight characteristics. Distance drivers have wider rims and sharper noses, so they might not be the best choice for younger players, newer players, or players with slower arm speeds.
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Fairway Drivers
Fairway Drivers have slightly smaller rims than distance drivers and are easier to control because they have less speed potential. While fairway drivers have less distance potential, they are a great choice for tighter lines, shots with less skip at the end, straighter flights, and shorter drives. Fairway drivers are generally a good choice for experienced and inexperienced players alike.
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Midranges
Midranges are a great disc to choose as your first disc. Midranges often offer straighter flights and won’t vary from their intended flight to the degree that fairway and distance drivers will if thrown errantly. Midranges have smaller rims that feel comfortable in most people’s hands and often have slightly deeper inner rims than drivers do. Midranges are very helpful for navigating narrow fairways and landing approaches close to the basket.
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Putters
Putters are the deepest, slowest, disc golf discs and have the thinnest rims. Putters are intended to fly shorter distances and on straighter lines. Putters are the slowest spinning discs, so they have less potential to deviate off line. While putters are made to go in the basket, they’re also less likely to fly too far beyond the basket. Along with developing a good short game, a player’s use of putters is extremely important to scoring well.
The Inaugural Pleasants County Amateur Championship had twenty-four disc golfers of all ages from across the Mid-Ohio Valley who competed for prizes and the official course record.
Below are the top finishers in each division:
MA1 Advanced Division
1st Lucas Hansen (-6)
T2nd Josh Turner (-3)
T2nd Jacob Richard (-3)
4th Evan Sexton (-1)
MA4 Novice
1st Jessy Moore (E)
2nd James Ramsey (+5)
3rd Phillip Bullock (+7)
MJ18
1st Triston Cayton
2nd Molly Lough
Josh Turner has the official course record for 18 holes (-6)