Menacewarf
Double Eagle Member
And when a disc hits a wall above a nice smooth sloped surface, well we saw what can easily happen.
The drop zone is necessary not because of the island, but because of how close the OB walls are to the pin. Without a DZ, you're putting from a meter in from where it went OB which is a very easy putt. The one stroke penalty you take from going OB is likely no different than if you had to try to hit a long putt from wherever you actually landed.
The drop zone forces you to still hit a tough shot after the penalty is applied.
Again, this adds an extra element of risk and excitement to the hole.
What are you saying - ? Did you read what I wrote? I was criticizing the drop zone for Ricky's shot not for the penalty aspect of not making the peninsula . . .?
I completely agree but the shot was not high risk. He threw it a bit poorly (for him) and it still should have been parked. He got unlucky to have it roll back OB. Simply put the odds heavily favored him going for it. It was a shot he should make 75% of the time. Take those odds and go for it.
Totally different situation. In golf (disc or otherwise) you ARE going to finish with a score on that hole. In basketball, you may not score ANYTHING when you shoot. You take whatever shot is a sure thing -- if you've got someone on a roll who has been hitting clutch threes all season, you put him to work and go for the win. If the threes haven't been there all game or all season, you take the tie and win it in OT.So you guys are pretty much saying:
If a teams makes a 2 and ties it up in basketball, you only have a few seconds to go..... Would you always go for the winning 3pt shot instead of 2 pointer and tie it?
opcorn:
that is one of the trickiest greens in disc golf. just ask.... anyone who took a 5 going for it.
it was also windy that day. wind could have taken the perfect shot out of the perfect zone. perhaps he got windblown into the wall.
Thank you as someone with first hand experience to recognize there is more to that shot than a lazy flick upshot. Trees, walls, weird angles, crowds, pressure, past history, having to shoot second from a worse angle, a sloped green, the chance to push available. Yah folks it's an easy shot in theory, a dump flick. But go out there with 500$ and a world of pride and competivness on the line and all those factors above weighing in on some realm of consciousness and then tell me it's easy.
May not be easy for most of us because we've rarely been in that situation before; easy for Ricky or any other pro in the top 10 because they've practiced that shot thousands of ties and been in that situation dozens, if not hundreds, of times and have 100% confidence in their ability to execute under pressure. That's why they're touring and we're not.
AOBTW, about the $500: given the makeup of the card, I'd be shocked if the Prodigy guys didn't make a side agreement ahead of time to split the difference if they finished 1-2 or 1-2-3.
Wrong. He's only been in that situation twice and both times went OB.
BZZZT! Wrong.
He's may only have been in that situation twice during the final round at the Maple Hill Open, but he's faced that situation countless times over the course of his career to date, both as a Pro and an AM, both in competition and in practice.
Bottom line is this: Ricky played--and is going to continue to play--HIS game and ignore the "helpful advice" from the armchair anal-ists.
Thanks for playing, though.
BZZZT! Wrong.
Thanks for playing, though.