21 Comments

  1. In my area its like 95% no wind days, but when that wind comes my game goes to hell

  2. That was a great clinic, my son Mikey Stonestreet and I were there, and I’ve played with Brad many of times over the years. This will definitely help you save some strokes on your game. It even helped me learn to not be a hero sometimes…

  3. Very informative! Thanks guys. I have definitely been getting better watching these videos and practicing.

  4. Discraft…you guys need to pick up the pace on making these vids man…theyre so awesome we need more!!

  5. Good advice, but he sounds like each time we do these things it causes him chest pains or something.

  6. He makes me want to see will ferrel do a Tim and Eric style disc golf lesson

  7. Four letters in disc golf I live by, just like tip #5, K.I.S.S. , Keep It Simple Stupid.

  8. learning a lot from all of these videos. I grew up playing Disc Golf, but got away from it fro a few years. Back at it with a passion now. Keep up the good work on these instructional videos.

  9. I would rather have a head wind putt instead of a tail wind because you usally wont miss low and it will give you a chance for it to go in if its pin high

  10. 4:04 – very impressive roller. Never really used that shot. I’ll have to grasp it after seeing the advantages.

  11. Yes but if you were actually listening and not looking for something asinine to say, you would realize that he has several of each model.
    Simple by his definition is carrying just a few models of discs and having 4-5 of each model for practice or using them a little more beat up or not. He probably ony has 6-7 models of discs like 3 types of drivers, 2 types of mids, and maybe 1-2 types of putters.
    When I carry a simple bag, I have 3 bosses, 3 wraiths, 3 TLs, 4 buzzzes, 1 Yeti, and 2 Magics.

  12. As you get better and your accuracy improves, missing low will stop your disc at the pin because you were on target but it just dropped too much son now there is no next putt.
    If you miss high, no matter how accurate it is, you could go 20+ feet beyond the basket.

  13. Both are when you are in a pretty bad spot. Scrambling is usually when there is enough of a window and the risk is minimal but you need a special type of shot to save par or bog. etc.. Heroic shots are when you have almost nothing that will get you to the pin and even if you get out, you probably won’t save a stroke.

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