The Sevan Podcast - Ezra Aderhold | Team Discraft - The Greatest Arm #935
Episode Date: June 7, 2023Welcome to this episode of the Sevan Podcast! 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice BIRTHFIT Programs: Prenatal - https:/.../marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1621968262?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Postpartum - https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1586459942?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Codes (20% off): Prenatal - SEVAN1 Postpartum - SEVAN2 ------------------------- Partners: https://cahormones.com/ - CODE "SEVAN" FOR FREE CONSULTATION https://www.paperstcoffee.com/ - THE COFFEE I DRINK! https://asrx.com/collections/the-real... - OUR TSHIRTS https://www.vndk8.com/ - OUR OTHER SHIRT https://usekilo.com - OUR WEBSITE PROVIDER 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event,
skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash yamex.
Benefits vary by car and other conditions apply.
That is the only point.
Bam, we're live.
Ezra, what's up? Good morning.
Hey, guys. How's it going? Good morning.
Originally, when I had you on,
first, you popped on my radar because my buddy here, Brian Friend,
you see him over there with the baseball hat on?
My buddy Brian Friend is pretty into Frisbee golf, and he knows that I like Frisbee.
I'm like a beach Frisbee guy with the 175-gram discraft and Miller High Life and a joint and a pack of cigarettes.
Early plug for discraft. He likes you already.
Oh, God, I love discraft.
I don't even understand how anyone else is even in the game innova it's funny watching um anyway don't get me sidetracked here um and uh i he so he we started
watching um he's like hey dude you should check out frisbee golf disc golf so i start watching it
and i start watching every weekend with him and then he comes on the podcast and we talk about it
and then all the callers kind of make fun of us right we got this whole
live chat that makes fun of us because we're into disc golf and i'm like there's there's one dude
that's yoked that wears his clothes too tight and why am i why am i fascinated with that fucking guy
and obviously because we're in the crossfit space and so i started obsessing on you and i started
getting in your dms and then i tell brian i'm like, Hey dude, I got Ezra Aderhold.
I said it right. Right.
Yeah. Yeah. That's it.
You were at her hold until I started doing research on you. Now I know.
Yep. That's what it is for a lot of people. So thanks for getting it right.
And what kind of name is that?
Goldman, I think.
Goldman or Russian maybe.
Are your parents born in this country yeah yeah you got you got a little uh hint of like foreigner in you a little bit where where were they born were you
were they amish or were they born on a commune or were they hippies no they're just you got
something off with you a little bit you got something a little like quirky hippie yeah
yeah it's uh it's just a speech impediment so a lot of people think it's like an
accent buff hippie with speech impediment yeah yeah with incredible arm incredible all right yeah
all right but were your parents hippies um not i wouldn't say hippies um i think they they grew up
in like a pretty normal like lifestyle and then after they got married
they kind of did research and uh then started kind of adopting the vegan lifestyle so I wouldn't say
like full hippie but they adopted like the health side of of kind of that lifestyle I suppose
um if you I know you get your blood work done and i want to tell you right away that my biggest
sponsor is a company called california hormones they give you free blood work for you especially
because you've been on the podcast if you're ever in southern california and newport beach
bring you into the facility cool and i don't know if you're if you're um uh if your sport tests
but they will also offer testosterone replacement therapy
so you can get a little more in your swing,
and they offer peptide.
They don't test, but I wouldn't feel too comfortable
going that route.
All right, fine, fine.
Yeah, me neither.
Me neither.
But me neither.
And then I also want to offer,
do you know about these?
Oh, my God.
I don't.
Those are my feet.
I know they look like bird feet.
Those are my feet.
I've got a lot of those, I don't think.
Maybe I've seen an ad or something.
I don't know.
Toe spacers?
Yeah, what's that?
This is what they look like when they're not on someone's foot.
Oh yeah.
Okay, there we go.
I would like to, how do people mail you stuff since you're
always on the road well we've been doing albans so sometimes if we time it right i can get stuff
sent that way um and then also i guess i'll be back home in like a month so sending stuff to
my house with well like my you know residential address location would work as well.
Okay.
I'd like to send you a pair of toe spacers.
I'll try them out.
Yeah, I don't want them to fuck up your game,
but I personally like them. Do you think they would mess up his game, Brian?
No, not at all.
Okay, good.
What's the benefits?
The idea is that in the Western world,
we spend so much time with our feet in shoes.
And so, you know, they're like this.
And the feet are meant to be, you know,
able to manipulate each individual toe and spread them out.
And so this is just a thing that you can do kind of at the end of a day
or while you're doing computer work or watching TV or, you know,
whatever things that you do.
And spend some time with your feet spread out so
that it gives a chance for the body to learn that movement pattern as well.
Basically your feet are trapped in shoes all day. Let them free.
I figured a hippie like you would appreciate that.
Physically conscious buff hippie. Like I'm, I'm me.
I'm you in 30 years, the way i'm the 51 year
old version of you uh you're 26 okay jamie latimer did he have to use a strip club wi-fi are you
parked because sometimes we have a guest who's on the road and they have to park in front of a strip
club for wi-fi are you parked in front of a strip club uh No, I'm in front of a Planet Fitness, but I'm just on my data.
Have you worked out already?
No, no.
I just went and brushed my teeth and stuff.
Oh, awesome.
I walk out at night.
I don't like to walk out and then try to go disc golf.
That can be kind of difficult with lactic acid buildup and stiffness and stuff like that.
Yeah, yeah.
I heard you say basically too that
obviously that would be the point of not doing steroids stories might actually shorten your
throw but basically that one of the benefits of working out is not necessarily to get more
on your throw but for injury prevention and i kind of love that yeah that's honest i feel like
that's probably like the main benefit is just uh injury prevention and then probably some confidence that I can gain
as well from being in shape.
A lot of the guys at the
top don't have
super built physiques
and they can still just rip the discs
with their athleticism
and their flexibility
and that side of the
physicality.
You know what I was really fascinated by after watching a bunch of podcasts
you were on and then watching your YouTube channel
is that basically you're a dude who's chasing your dream.
And I spent years homeless and then I spent years living in a car
and during that time I was the only person I knew who wasn't a drug addict.
And now here's another dude. And it kind of is the misnomer about homelessness because here you are purposely choosing to be homeless so that you could fucking pursue your fucking dream. all over the planet. If you're a painter, you should be driving around in your Prius that's set up to cook beans to paint the Grand Canyon one day and the Empire State Building the next day.
And if you want to be a professional athlete, you should be chasing the circuit. Or if someone
wanted to be a professional videographer or photographer, they should be chasing you,
chasing the circuit in their own car. And I just want to tell you kudos to you for just like
really showing what human beings are capable of and making life fun.
Is your life fun?
It looks so fun.
I mean, it's definitely up and down.
I think like probably anybody's life, you know, but the I mean, I'm definitely blessed to be able to travel around and see a lot of cool places and compete and just play disc golf.
You know, obviously it's walk at the same time.
I have to, you know, actually put time into practicing and you know preparing and stuff like that but it's really cool to see
all the people on tour kind of just doing the same doing the same thing you know on the playing side
and also on the videography side just kind of you know like you said kind of living in living
vehicles and you know traveling around and pursuing that and it's getting to a point to uh
you know less and less people on tour actually have to do that lifestyle. This season, I'm actually living
in the Airbnb's, which is a lot nicer than sleeping in a Prius, obviously.
It's cool to see the sport move in that direction as well.
By the way, this throw is beautiful. Where is this?
That is in Des Moines, Iowa.
God, it's beautiful
that was a fun spot
are you playing a hole there
is that a hole or are you just having fun
you're like hey guys film this watch this
yeah just having fun
I think that was actually one of the days
that might have been a Saturday
I think I went and had a tournament round right after this
but I kind of just zoomed in on the map
and I saw this little river and I was like, oh, this looks like
a cool spot to like throw across. So then my brother who was on tour with me last year,
I was like caddy and film guy and stuff. We just went over and, uh, threw some shots and
it was like the perfect distance to where I could actually cross the river.
So we got a couple of different camera angles and he shot it all and found out pretty sweet.
Okay. I think I saw pictures. I didn't realize that was your brother he's a little shorter but he's all buff too yeah yep he's a little bit shorter but he's probably pound for pound
a little thicker than i am so he's not traveling with you this year not this season no how is he
is uh he plays as well he does not play no i mean we started playing at the same time so
my brothers and my dad kind of found disc golf at the same time so we kind of all casually played
for a couple seasons or a couple years i guess and then uh when i started taking it more seriously
he was still playing golf you know pretty seriously so he kind of stopped playing disc
golf and i kind of stopped playing golf and kind of went the disc golf way.
So he doesn't really play.
He kind of wanted to do his own thing.
I think, you know, it's not, it's not super fulfilling,
just kind of traveling around with me.
I don't think, and just kind of, I guess living my dreams.
So I think he, he kind of wants to pursue his own, his own path.
So I can totally, totally, you know, relate to.
So I think, yeah, I think he'll be better off kind of, yeah. Most of his own stuff.
Uh, a hundred, a hundred percent natural. Someone over here asked,
so he's not natty. No, you're, you're completely natural.
Yep.
You're just maximizing what a human body can do and you're vegan and you've
been vegan your entire life.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean the last, the last handful of years or so I've,
you know, tried some non-vegan food here and there,
but, you know, 98, 99% of my diet is still plant-based.
Are there other guys on tour that are vegan?
Yeah, there are a few.
One of the best players in the world for the last five years or so
grew up vegan throughout his whole life as well,
but he's recently turned to carnivore.
So there was one last plant-based guy on 2-0.
But I think there's a handful of people that are plant-based
or at least mostly plant-based.
There's basically one guy in CrossFit that I know of
that was able to get very, very good being vegan.
He's an Australian guy.
So I just always find it interesting when there is an athlete that –
because a lot of people, they perceive the vegan diet
to be limiting to a certain degree,
but to know that there are a few people in each of these kind of select sports
that are still able to get to the top with that diet.
It's kind of cool.
I'll show you the guy.
You're talking about Newberry, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
James, I think that's a wooden.
Oh, geez.
Okay.
I think that's a wooden dumbbell.
But yeah, Australian dude.
Pretty jacked.
Cool dude.
Jacked out of his mind, dude.
Jacked out of his mind.
You know what's interesting?
You know what's interesting, though?
Kind of like your body.
You know what's interesting?
You know what's interesting, though?
Kind of like your body.
Your body changes tremendously between whether you're relaxed or pumped.
When you start working out, you start getting really, really jacked, right?
I mean, there's like a noticeable difference. Like when you're just relaxed, you just look like a swimmer.
And then I look at videos of you like after you've been working out a little bit,
I'm like, oh, shit, he's pumped out of his mind.
Your body goes through a pretty quick transformation.
Yeah, I mean, the pump definitely adds a lot.
I mean, I think flexing, just flexing, it probably changes the most.
You know, if I don't flex, you don't really see any striations or anything.
Whereas if I flex, those striations in my chest or my shoulders, you know,
or stuff like that obviously the
size changes too so i mean i keep it pretty consistent as far as like walking out throughout
the season and off season so i don't really see any huge like you know like mass differences as
far as people who like bulk and cut i kind of keep it pretty consistent so i don't see a huge difference in that that way how tall are you six well a little
over six one oh wow okay how much of a factor do you think height plays in the ability to be elite
at disc golf i think it definitely helps um i don't think it's the most important thing like
it is in you know other sports like basketball or something it's not that physical of a sport
but it definitely it definitely gives you an advantage as far as distance goes
because I think you can use your length and those levels to get more power.
But at the same time, like, the most dominant player in our game so far
is only 5'9", I think.
That's probably right.
So it's definitely not, you know, those more things that are more important, like focus and consistency, accuracy, all that stuff, which height doesn't
really play a huge factor on just a few weeks ago.
The guy that won is maybe, maybe five, seven.
Um, who's that?
You know, he's, he's still totally fallen.
He got the win.
So, so Paul, Paul McBeth is a guy that he's referencing.
It was five, nine and Emerson Keith, I think is the other five, seven.
I never knew how tall Emerson was, but he's –
I mean, he is – I would say they're both an outlier
relative to most of the guys.
It seems like 6'1 is kind of like a –
a lot of players seem to be about that height,
that are, you know, towards the top.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I'm not even – I'm not even considered that tall in, you know,
professional fiscal. I mean, Calvin and Ricky and Gannon.
It's like it's just –
Right, exactly.
Look at this guy.
This commentator is as tall as Gannon.
Unless he's maybe standing uphill a little bit.
He's probably standing – that's Nate Hawkins.
He's about 6'1", 6'2", as well.
I think Gannon's probably 6'5", maybe.
Maybe 6'6".
He's really big.
So Gannon's, what did you say?
Who's 7'2"?
In a couple of years, he'll probably be like 7'2".
He's only 18, so he's probably going to keep shooting up.
I think there's a joke on tour that Gannon grows 2 inches every year.
Yeah.
Does he really stand out?
Cause he's so tall.
Is he that tall?
It's like,
Oh,
like if he walks into like a seven 11 or something,
it's like everyone looks.
Um,
maybe.
Yeah.
I mean,
like on to all,
he doesn't stand out.
It's like super tall.
Cause you got guys like Ricky and Calvin,
like,
uh,
like he said,
so he's not like,
he's not way taller than everybody on 2-0,
but I guess compared to our average population at 7-11,
he maybe would stand out.
Have you ever seen a woman spectator in all the years you've been playing disc golf?
I've been waiting to see one woman in the stands.
I haven't seen one.
You ever seen one?
I mean, it's definitely male-dominated,
but there's definitely women out there as well.'re allowed in they're allowed yeah okay just checking
all right sorry this was pretty inclusive okay good all right great um uh when you told can you
go back and tell me um the first time you held a disc in your hand? Any kind of... 2014, I believe.
So 10 years ago.
Yep.
Yeah, about 10 years ago.
At 16.
Yeah.
Yeah, we played Ultimate Frisbee a little bit, like with the swim team.
I grew up swimming competitively.
And so a few, like every Wednesday morning, I guess, we would go out and play Ultimate Frisbee with the team.
So I knew how to throw a Frisbee.
out and play ultimate frisbee with the team so i knew how to throw it how to throw a frisbee but then we just kind of saw some people randomly playing disc golf in the course they must have
just recently put in so we kind of saw it thought it looked like fun and then i think my brother
maybe found a disc in a creek or something so we like used that and some ultimate discs went out
and played and kind of liked it right away and then got on youtube and started watching all the
drama stuff and you know central coast and fell watching all the Joma stuff and Central Coast
and fell in love with that side of the game too.
Do you remember – so at 16, I'm assuming when you started playing,
are you right-handed?
Yes.
And do you remember the first time you threw a forehand?
Oh, man.
I don't.
Did it take a while though?
Did it take a while, like at least a year?
Yeah, I think it kind of went at a similar pace.
I can remember we used to travel as a family in the wintertime
because my parents hated the cold, I guess like I do.
But I can remember we were in Vegas at a course,
and I felt like my forehand was almost stronger than my backhand,
so I started kind of throwing it more often.
And then my brother Judah was, he kind of told me to not like lean on that so much just
because the backhand is, is kind of the better throw.
So I think, I think it was, I think my backhand forehand was probably somewhat even right away.
And then after I kind of took disc golf seriously and put a lot of time into the backhand, then
my, my backhand's gotten to be a lot
more prominence so you started backhand but quickly realized you had a better forehand that's
interesting i never even thought it's such a for me it's such a bizarre uh throw it it it seems
yeah unnatural to me i think i think a lot of people pick up the forehand easier because i
feel like it's a more comparable motion to like a baseball
toss or tennis you know hit or something like that while the backhand is kind of more of a unique
movement i would say and then what about switching from a ultimate frisbee disc to a disc golf disc
it's to me it's like almost not even the same game it's not right yeah it's it's totally different
it's it's like a different throw as well with the ultimate disc you can get away with you know kind of really getting your
arm super like cold up and just spinning the disc a lot you don't need a lot of speed whereas the
way the discs are designed speed is a lot more important to get the disc to travel so you i mean
you know you'll see some some ultimate play i'll try to transition to disc golf and it's not
it's not as easy as maybe you'd think. Brody Smith, obviously, being probably the most
notable one. He's done a good job of transitioning, but it was definitely difficult for him
right away. I don't feel like transitioning from ultimate gives you a huge
advantage. Was Brody a good ultimate Frisbee player?
He was probably the best. He was definitely the
best at the time he played
I don't know about
Still but he might be the best at all
Also a big man sport
Yeah for sure
That's when too while like jumping
And being able to jump high and be tall in that way
Helps as well
So
16 you're swimming
Did you go to high school or were you homeschooled?
I was homeschooled.
God, dude.
You are a fucking hippie.
Beans, vegan, homeschool, travel during the winter.
Why are you having trouble accepting this? You and I are from the same cloth.
I mean, you're on a slightly different part of the blanket.
I mean, I'm only 5'5".
But we are weaved.
That's generous.
Yeah, thank you.
Homeschooled.
Yeah.
Where are your parents?
What ethnicity are your parents?
I mean, just white.
We did...
Are you Amish?
How many years Amish?
No, no.
Where were they born?
South Dakota.
God.
Both of them.
You have cool parents. they're cool you feel pretty
lucky oh for sure yeah i feel super blessed to be to be raised by them i think they i think they
did a good job as far as you know parenting can go it's that it's a tough job so you're an
independent strong human being that there's not a lot of those left chasing the dream. It's it's. Wow. Okay. What generation are your parents?
Um, I think my, I want to say like my, maybe my,
my mom's grandma, maybe my great grandma, like couldn't speak English.
So what did she speak? I think German, I believe.
I think it went like German, Russian, Switzerland, maybe.
It's as far back as we've gone.
Do you know how your parents met?
In college.
In the Dakotas?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I didn't even know they had college in the Dakotas.
I mean, it is pretty, it is pretty skillful.
Not a whole lot going on, but
Hey, will that, will that five-five
When the man bun is on top
That's correct
Where would you consider home?
I still claim South Dakota
You know, so when they announce me, you know, for the false T
They still say
They still say South Dakota
I haven't, i haven't settled down
anywhere else since so you know maybe if i buy a house somewhere for the off season then maybe
i'd claim that but i would still i would still claim south dakota do you still in this sport
of disc golf is that something that they like ask you at a tournament or they ask you before the
season because sometimes the players will change you know like right yeah we have to we have to uh plug that in when we sign up for the
for the pdga membership i think is what it is um so we have to like claim a residency somewhere
and so mine is still still something so like every year when you update your pdga rating you could
that's when you can make the change. Yeah. I could pop,
I think you can go in and edit it as well.
So if I wanted to go change it now,
I probably could do that as well.
You mean like what his home state is?
They'll just say,
you know,
now taking the T from South Dakota,
Robert sponsored by discraft as a radar.
Okay.
But,
but some players,
you know,
they move,
you know,
like,
you know,
Paul McBeth for a long time.
I don't know what he claims anymore,
but it always was Huntington beach,
but he hasn't lived there for a long time. Right. Yeah. Now it's, what was, you know, like, uh, you know, Paul Macbeth for a long time. I don't know what he claims anymore, but it always was Huntington beach, but he hasn't lived there for a long time.
Right. Yeah. Now it's, well, it was Virginia then for a couple of years.
And now it's, uh, it'll probably be Florida now.
Hey, and you were into real estate. Uh, that was your,
that was your first occupation before you, did you still own any property?
I don't. Yeah. I mean, mean growing up my dad had rental properties so
you know we got pretty familiar with uh like the renovation side of of all that and uh yeah so that
interested me i wanted to kind of just be like a real estate mogul make a bunch of money so i
got out of high school my brother and i bought like four houses, fixed them up, and then sold them. And kind of realized that with all that time spent,
we couldn't really do anything.
Like even if we had money, it wasn't really worth it at the time.
And I kind of realized that I could probably just make money
when I'm older if I wanted to.
So it made more sense for me to take the, I guess,
a little risk maybe that there was and create something
that I thought would be a little bit more enjoyable.
Do you guys do the manual labor on
those yourself? Yeah.
Yeah, we did most of the stuff
ourselves.
So,
16, you pick up
a disc for the first time.
Was there a time where you were like
it started taking
an inordinate amount of your time? You're like basically like in between renovating houses or class or whatever, you were like, it started taking an inordinate amount of your time?
You're like basically like in between renovating houses or class or whatever, you're like,
well, I just want to get, or you start noticing you're on the internet looking for new discs.
Is there a point when you're like, okay, something's going on here.
I found my passion.
You're playing on rainy days, windy days.
You're playing at night with a headlamp.
You know what I mean?
When you just start seeing, you set up, you get a basket, you steal a basket from a course and put it in your backyard shit like that starts
happening um not until after the houses so i would say from like 16 until 19 um it was super
it was super casual you know i mean even in height like for the first couple years
golf was my main focus so from 16 to 18 i was i was still playing golf primarily and just would play disc golf casually
and then um yeah for that whole summer of doing the renovations didn't really spend any time
disc golfing at all um just because we were we were trying to put 10 10 11 hour days into the
houses to get them fixed up as soon as possible. And then after we got done with the walk,
then I kind of realized, like, I kind of want to do something else.
And I was already confident in my disc golf game for whatever reason.
Like, I felt like I was already good enough to be, like, professional,
which was obviously not even close.
But then after putting in a lot of work, I knew I'd be able to, I guess, make it.
Excuse me for one second.
Sorry, I apologize.
I'm just being honest.
When Mayhem goes live, I'm out of here.
I'd rather watch Kettlebells and Cox
than listen to Disc Golf.
I respectfully say, you fucking cunt,
get the fuck out of here
and don't post in my chat again.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
No hard feelings.
Okay.
Thank you.
Okay.
Wow.
You're sweating now?
Fucking dickhead.
They're having a fucking conversation about going over.
You want to go over and suck Rich's cock?
Go ahead.
I ain't hating on you.
Go.
Go.
Rich Froning is kind of like.
I'm ready to leave fucking two, Brian, with this guy so they can talk about Frisbee to
go give Rich a hand.
Go ahead.
Dickheads.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding, Ezra.
Ezra is kind of like Paul McBeth.
He's been the best guy in the game for a long time,
and he's actually,
he's a friend of ours,
but he also has a podcast going on right now.
They're over here talking in the chat about going over there.
Okay, look,
here's the guy who's pretty happy he met you,
Brian,
at the West Coast semifinals.
Here we go.
Met a lot of good people this last month.
Look, Jody Lynn, I love this guest. Yeah, what's done to like about him i'm gonna put up some um um
pictures of him with his shirt off will that keep some of you around look we have one girl
look we have one girl who listens to the podcast there we go way more than that okay
uh okay uh here we go back back back what what do you do for a living oh yeah golf Here we go. Back, back, back. What do you do for a living? Oh yeah.
Golf. Here we go back to Ezra Aderhold.
Ezra this, this year, you and Brody have started doing like the course reviews,
like, you know, the, you know, you'll play when you get there. Have you,
I'm just kind of curious, have you been,
has that been rewarding for you or is like the time that it takes to do that
sometimes a distraction or is it a, and a lot of extra work?
Yeah. So we actually kind of started doing that last season as well.
And it's definitely beneficial.
You know, YouTube does do pretty well monetarily,
so that definitely helps out.
Last season, we did all the editing ourselves.
And that definitely, I felt like, took a little bit of a toll
just because I'd be up kind of late at night editing the video or early in the morning trying to edit so we can get it posted before the tournament would start.
And I feel like that maybe had a little bit of a negative effect on my game.
Thankfully, this year we've been able to outsource that, which obviously costs a little bit.
So the revenue is not going to be maybe as good as it was last year, but think it'll be it'll be worth it um and then it's also it's enjoyable you know it's something
we have we have fun doing and we'll already make like practicing so it's like we might as well
film it as well and then people enjoy it so i really like it you know i i uh it looks like
it's a lot of work just to add to what you're saying brian i watched one last night and i was
like oh this is this seems pretty stressful like he should be like chilling the day before yeah we usually film on like monday
or tuesday so we have a couple days of just like practice without the cameras um after before the
before the tournament um but it's i mean it doesn't it's not really a whole lot different
than like a normal practice round goes you know we kind of We're typically talking about the shots during a practice round
and typically making jokes anyway.
We're just capturing
what we would already do
and then just posting that.
Has it led to you eating a lot more waffles
than you usually would?
I've definitely eaten more waffles
since meeting Brody.
Why? He's big into waffles?
Yeah, he loves Waffle House.
So we'll have these, like, we'll have
a little side bet
sometimes for, you know, who has to
buy the waffles next time.
There's nothing at Waffle House
that you should be eating, by the way.
No.
Final hole.
Hey, do you like playing with your shirt tucked in?
I think I was more professional.
Yeah, I mean... You look professional. Yeah, I mean.
You look great.
Pants are tight.
You can see you squat below parallel.
Shirt's tight.
But I was thinking that when you rotate that you would feel that tug in your waistband,
and that would be like take your attention away from the throws, no?
Oh, man.
I hope not.
I don't think so.
Okay, good.
All right.
Don't let me get you in there.
Yeah, I've been tucking it in for a while.
I played golf in high school, and I think I would tuck in for that too.
At the very least, I'm used to it.
Do you look down upon the guys who show up kind of just looking like hippies?
Like, come on, guys.
Tighten up your shit.
Professional up.
I maybe did at the beginning, but since I've been on 2-0, it's gotten a lot.
I guess since I've been involved in disc golf and watching the sport,
I feel like there's been a shift.
So even from six years ago when I started watching,
I think the way people have presented themselves is more professional,
which I like to see.
But I like the jolts that people weigh on.
I think that looks good enough, and I think that's a good look for disc golf. Some of the athletic jolts is maybe not on i think that looks um you know good enough and i think that's that's a good look for this golf um some of the athletic schwarzes maybe not what i'd love to see but at the same time it you know the the run-up is athletic moves so i can understand what people
would want to wear all the more athletic clothing so i can't i don't look down on it too bad do the
sponsors get involved in that at all would they like like reach out and say, hey, man, you know, we might appreciate you wearing this or not that?
Well, there is a dress code in the PGA rules.
So, I mean, kind of have to adhere to that.
The sponsors, I don't know if the sponsors, you know, care too much.
I think they want us to look presentable, which most people do.
So it's not really an issue, I don't think.
By the way, Jamieie latimer i apologize
you're right quit counting us girls out uh you're absolutely right i will try just i forget that
there's girls out here uh chelsea uh speaking of uh females i'm loving this i just recently
started disc golfing it's a lot of fun awesome um you're so so you're young you're you're young. You're athletic, good parents, and you dabble in real estate. You read Rich Dad, Poor Dad. You think having money would be fun. Please continue to think that. It is fun.
And then you – at some point, you believe in yourself enough to think that you can play professional frisbee golf.
Is that confidence or naiveness?
Yeah, honestly, I think it was naiveness because we, I don't know.
Congratulations, it fucking worked.
Yeah, I got lucky.
I don't know.
We thought like right when we started playing, we were arrogant enough.
And I think naive is a good word for it.
To think that we were already like good enough to be professional and we watched the YouTube videos. We're like, we can arrogant enough, and I think naive is a good word for it, to think that we were already
good enough to be professional and we watched the YouTube
videos and we're like, we can throw these shots.
Their distances,
they'll just hype that up to make it look better.
And I can remember going to
a tournament in
California.
I can't remember. It's the real-time open.
I can't remember the town.
But we saw Paul McBeth play and some some other pros as well and even watching them in person
We're like, yeah
We can fight you can fight foes for all these guys
And then we went out after the round and played the same course and then we would feel like me through the shot
It was like half the distance and we're like, oh my gosh. Well, what will be bad?
and
So they're like that was really like that was really
What will be bad?
And,
uh,
so they're like,
that was really like,
that was really like disappointing to,
to just be a lot worse than we thought.
So then I kind of,
I kind of made a decision at that point to either like not play anymore. Cause I just,
I was like,
this is,
I don't want to be this bad or to like take it seriously and try to make it
my job.
So I think that would have been,
I must've been 2019.
Um,
and I was like,
I guess I'm just going to,
Oh,
I guess I'll do it.
But you did your first pro tour in May of 2019.
So quickly.
Oh, it would have been 2017.
Okay, 2017.
Okay, 2017.
And was that a test?
You were testing me?
No.
Okay, okay.
And just to, so if you're throwing half as far, so you – in those two years, you think you doubled your drive off the tee distance from 17 to 19?
A little more close. Yeah, double is maybe a bit much. It probably wasn't quite half either. I was probably throwing three – maybe 350 on like a full flight.
That's me now, by the way.
And now what do you throw?
Now what do you throw?
I would say like 600.
I mean, my longest like – my longest like – my actual throw is 679 in a contest.
Wow.
God.
I'm not – I mean, I'm not really hitting 600 in a tournament setting usually
just because it's such an aggressive line.
And there's really few holes that demand that.
Yeah, exactly.
And especially now, the calls are becoming increasingly difficult
with OB and decision-making and all that stuff too.
You can't really get away with just spraying a shot as far as you want on most uh on most courses that's actually that's one of the two things
that i appreciate i think most about the videos that you and brody put out is the kind of the
course analysis and that you guys aren't really afraid to say like i can see where the course
designers coming with this hole or these style of holes that they've chosen to sprinkle into the
course layout and then you'll say and i and i like it for this reason or i don't like it for that reason but in general um how how
difficult do you think it's becoming for course designers to find like holes or layouts that are
challenging enough for you guys without being kind of like over the top ridiculous yeah it is
it is a difficult thing um you know i, I think we always make the comparison to golf
just because it's a somewhat similar sport.
And they have the putting so difficult.
They can easily adjust the greens kind of and the speed
and all that stuff to make the whole play so much more difficult
just on that one small area where we don't really have that.
You know, the putting is one of the easier parts.
Well, for some people, it's one of the easier parts of well for some people it's one
of the easier parts of the game so i'm sometimes still working on but um without without making a
whole fluky but still difficult is one of the biggest challenges um and obviously those things
you can do with ob to make you maybe want to play safe um but i don't know you know i'd like i'd like
to see i'd like to see them shrink the baskets
and see what that would do because i think i think making the putting more difficult would make
everything about the game more difficult i think i'd really interested to see interested to see
what what that would do is there a is there a minimum or maximum requirement that the pdga
enforces for that like do the baskets have to be a certain diameter? Yeah, I believe so.
To be, you know, it's one of those things that like, in my opinion, and this is kind
of coming from the CrossFit space, like there's certain parts of the season that are part
of the season, but then there's, you know, like tournaments or competitions outside of
the season that could do some experimenting in that regard.
So it might be cool for an like out-season tournament to just try that with the diameter that's like 75%
of the mandated PDGA one and just kind of do a little study
and see how it is.
Right, for sure.
I mean, there has been an event in the past in Utah, I believe,
where they had a basket with basically just the inside chains.
So it's like a Marksman basket, I guess. And it's just like um it's like a marksman basket i guess
and it's just really it's like the width of a disc is all and that basket doesn't really catch
very well because it's so easy to just hit the pole and bounce straight back out so i don't think
that's necessarily the the route i think they'd have to shrink every every aspect of the of the
basket the width and the height and proportionally just bring it down smaller yeah exactly um and then somehow figure out a way to make a catch well and then if that
could happen then i think it'd be ideal uh jeffrey birchfield 679 wow and yeah that's crazy uh jamie
does he play real golf yeah i played i played real golf in in high school for four or five years um since then i
haven't played a whole lot you know i'll go out maybe a couple times a year um and maybe go to
top golf once in a while but not not super committed to that anymore um just to put things
in perspective um let's uh tell people about this shot one more time. Jeffrey Birchfield,
good,
great question.
How far is this?
How far is this being thrown?
That was about five 50.
I think.
Okay.
Cause that looks like it's just going forever and ever.
Yeah.
And that's,
I mean,
I can't tell if you got a full flight out of it.
It almost just looks like a Heiser flip to flat.
Yeah,
I think it did tone some,
those were,
those were some pretty flippy discs.
The first batch of the Nukes last season came out pretty flippy,
so I was having to put those on a pretty steep Heiser angle,
and we had a little bit of headwind too, so it got a lot of movement.
God, it's cool.
You look like a friend of mine and Brian's in this.
Do you know who I'm talking about, Brian, who he looks like?
No.
Chase Ingram.
Oh yeah.
Actually a great comparison.
Yeah.
Right.
Every time I watch that,
I'm like,
is that Chase?
Chase is playing for the Judy Reed.
Our elbow injuries or shoulder injuries,
common,
similar to baseball players.
Yeah,
there has been,
there has been a few elbow injuries from some of the top players
and then also knee i think would probably be like the next most common um you know i think one of
the one of the things is we don't have as many staff members kind of helping people with the
injury prevention stuff that like mlb will have so we't have, we don't have as much access to that. We do have one guy.
I think that helps a lot.
Like a body worker who's on the tour.
Yeah. Yeah.
So, you know,
he helps a lot with people getting warmed up before the round and stretching
after the round and all that, that stuff, which I think is important.
But yeah, I mean,
there's definitely a lot of strain that goes onto the elbow. So that's,
it's definitely, you know,
if you want to work with that guy, do you have to like sign up for i mean there's oftentimes
100 plus players in a tournament that seems like one guy's job almost impossible yeah it's it's
it's included with the tour call that we sign up for so we get access to it um and then it's all
it's also spread out throughout the day so you know if I tee off at 11 o'clock, you know
You know, maybe goats. Oh somebody sees off like 11 o'clock
We go see him for like the half-hour also leading up to it and then the pulse that he's off at noon will go
you know talk to him like right before that and she kind of
Goes up his day. Oh, how difficult is it to get a tour card?
You have to be top
80 tour card? You have to be top 80 from the previous season
I think or top 72
I think it's top 80. Is that based on
player rating or is it based on the
world rankings that the
I think it's based on the
pro tour points
pro tour points
so if you don't
I'm a very analytical mind.
For CrossFit, I do a lot of data analysis, research,
and evaluation of the players and the competitions.
And I'm starting to gain a lot of knowledge and interest in disc golf
in the same regard.
And I'm always curious where I should look.
On the PDGA, they have the rating.
And so you can see who the highest rated rated players are on the mpo site or
udisc with mpo they have this dominance index which i don't entirely understand and then of
course there's the tour points which one of those do you think is the best reflection of
who actually are the top players at any given time i like the the two points the most i think at the
end of the season especially so if you even if you just look at the end of last season,
I think that probably has the best gauge.
Ricky Wysocki is going to love that you said that.
Yeah, I think the player rating is probably the least accurate.
I don't know.
The player rating is a tough one just because you can go play events off
to all that will rate differently depending on the field
and the difficulty of the quals.
So it's not a perfect system.
I think it's a good system for amateur players,
but I don't think it's super necessary for the pro field.
And then the UDisc, the UDisc ranking is also, it's decent, I think.
I don't think it's perfect either.
I think maybe the StatMando World Rankings is maybe the best one.
That's probably pretty similar to the UDisc, I guess.
But I think that's maybe the best outside of the Pro Tour points.
Congratulations in Portland.
You're on the chase card with Calvin.
Good call, right?
Chase card with...
No, Calvin...
I think Calvin was like third card,
but he just shot really well.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay, and you put it to your homeboy Gannon too.
Yeah.
And to Brody.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm glad Brody played well.
You must have felt horrible for that.
He's been chasing down the USDGC spot and the ULP
and Open spot, so I'm happy he's going to
qualify for both of those. Say that one more time.
Sorry, say that again.
I'm happy that Brody played well.
He's been chasing down the USDGC
spot, like the qualifying
spot, and the ULP and Open spot
as well.
So he got both of those this week, which is super nice.
That is awesome.
And it's, I mean, let's be super honest.
I think it's good for the sport also that he's able to, you know,
elevate and qualify for those tournaments.
Obviously, I think he's probably brought a big following over from his previous endeavors.
Yep.
Ezra, right here it says Brody's number is 128 000 and yours is uh
121 000 and uh and then let's say like someone like james proctor is 34 000 is that just when
they came into the sport because that guy's been in the sport for so long yep that's just literally psychological oh wow yeah yeah holy cow okay
and it only as far as i can tell it only matters in very specific scenarios uh where there's a
tiebreaker like if um for example if ezra and i were playing in round two and we both shot the
same in round two and had the same total for the tournament then the next tiebreaker would be the
fact that he had a lower pdga number than me when determining which card we would play on in the third round correct yeah
brian said something to you that i didn't understand you guys were talking going back
to courses and about holes being uh difficult or good and i and then he said and then i think
you guys said that word versus a floaty hole or floky hole what was the word fluky fluky what
does that mean like a hole that's like got a gimmick in it that's like kind of yeah yeah so i mean you can make a whole floki
with just having like if you just imagined having like ob cross the fairway every 10 feet this would
be like a super extreme example well you could just have you could have the ob for out of bounds
for people who don't know out of bounds so what you're saying is if you made a checkerboard
and the white was out of bounds and black was in't know out of bounds. So what you're saying is if you made a checkerboard and the white was out of
bounds and black was in bounds, that would be cheese dick.
Right. It'd be a very difficult hole,
but it also is just super gimmicky and fluky. Okay. That's one way to do it.
You can also have a whole world. It's just throwing through a wall of trees.
But you have just kind of poke and hope that you get through. That's,
that's one of the more common ways I would say.
Or you can have thing like hills can be kind of fluky as well,
depending on how you land on the hill and roll away,
but that's something you can actually manage those different ways to make a
hole difficult. Um, but those, you know, like, like some of those,
those examples, those, some bad ways to make holes difficult as well.
Or, or even, even the mandos that they put in the mandatory,
like right off the tee, sometimes there'll be some mandatories.
And while I'm, because I'm not super familiar with the sport and I'm watching on TV, I can't really tell what the purpose of it is.
I can't tell like, hey, why are they trying to guide the dude right through this?
Or if the mandatory is pretty far off the tee, it's like, oh, shit.
What happens if you go outside a mando that's out of bounds?
It's basically, yeah, it's typically this kind of similar to going out of balance and you take you know you take your stroke for going out you
take a stroke for coming back and then you throw at it at it like a drop zone right next to the
mandatory it's like the typical the typical ruling the purpose of a mando is basically to
limit people from taking an easier line to the basket so if you can imagine like a dog leg
a big dog leg left that's like 600 feet in the wide open.
You could just go straight at the pin at like 400 feet.
They put a Mando half way down the fairway,
makes you go all the way around the hole.
So they can.
Gotcha.
On more open calls,
especially it's,
it's definitely necessary sometimes.
Sometimes it's for safety.
They don't want you throwing into another hole as fairway or they know
there's going to be fans over there.
Yeah.
Heidi groom. Is he single? Are you single mr ezra i am single yes yeah did you ever come back to the game oh
nice i like that um in um uh some sports i'm trying to think what like professional basketball
and i want they have like words for the for for the girls around the course are like called like something bunnies or
something. I can't remember. Does golf have those?
Like girls who are on the tour, like chasing you down,
trying to get you to marry you, try to spend the night in the Prius.
Anyone ever try to spend the night in the Prius?
I mean, I don't think, you know, back when I was living in the Prius,
I don't think that's a super attractive quality for a guy to have.
So I didn't have any issues back then.
As soon as you upgraded to the motor home.
Now,
I mean,
it's,
it hasn't,
that hasn't really been,
there's not a whole lot of this golf groupies.
So do you have any time for courtship?
Do you have any time for dating?
Anything like that?
Yeah.
I mean,
every now and again,
I've gone on some dates you know in
the past couple years but it's kind of a difficult it's kind of a difficult part of the job just with
how much i travel i feel like it'd be difficult to actually get into like a relationship you know
i don't i don't think the long distance thing would be super fair for either people so i don't
know it's it's kind of unfortunate,
but for where I'm at in my career right now,
I feel like it's not a super plausible option.
In the CrossFit competitions,
I always recommend, if possible,
for someone to bring a person with them,
whether it's their girlfriend or their wife or a manager.
Really? Your girlfriend or your wife? Really?
Just hear me out, Stefan.
Okay, okay. Someone that can be there for them to do simple things you know make sure
that they're eating or you know if they forgot something at the hotel they can run and get it
for them it's just like these little things because crossfit competition is very demanding physically
and you know in in this golf and specifically relevant to this conversation i notice i don't
know what percentage but there's a decent amount of players on tour that have their girlfriend or wife that travel with them all the time. Do you think that
can be an advantage or do you think that sometimes it's too distracting?
Yeah, I think it could go either way, depending on the person and depending on the situation and
how they handle things. I think, I mean, I could definitely see, they're all benefits, I'm sure.
You know, and obviously Some people make it walk so
I don't think it'd be a completely just like
Negative distracting type thing
And if it's the right pulse I think it could be
A benefit
I don't know what if you get in a fight with your girl
About something just inconsequential
Just prior to getting on the holes
That would suck
Like someone forgot to pick up the dog poop i mean just some bullshit right yeah i don't know
you'd have to have a great mate who at all times can just give you a kiss and be like hey just drop
it let's let this go they'd have to be able to just squash anything yeah i mean it's wild there
are certain players and sometimes like
very high level players,
you know, like Chris and Eagle
that you just expect
their significant other
to be there all the time.
And for those,
it does seem like
it works out very well.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
You said you're 26?
25.
25.
25.
A 609 mile.
That's pretty crazy that's that that's uh that's that's pretty crazy did you ever read in that video you said you were going to retime it i didn't believe you i'm like
there's no way he's retiming that after getting a 609 i planned on it well that was i didn't train
at all for that and my plan was to like, yeah. My plan was to.
By the way, another sign of a hippie.
See the way like you don't brush your hair and you just let it fro and like that.
I mean, it's kind of you got to live free, dude.
Yeah.
You're totally living free.
Okay.
Go on.
My plan was to, you know, practice like train a lot through the offseason and then go back
and time myself,
uh,
at the mile again,
just to see if I improved.
I did the same thing with swimming as well.
And about a month into like run,
like,
you know,
going on runs every other day or whatever.
Uh,
my foot,
I got some foot pain,
I think is what it was.
And so I kind of stopped.
Uh, maybe I'm not super familiar with, Like plantar fasciitis? Ah, maybe.
I'm not super familiar with anything like that.
Did it feel like you were stepping on a tack?
Did it feel like you were stepping on a tack?
I don't know if I would say a tack.
Okay.
I don't know.
I'm like a doctor.
Okay.
Okay, go ahead.
It was a while ago, yeah.
So I kind of stopped doing the running side of it,
and I kept up with the swimming until the season started.
But it would have been interesting to see what I could have ran after all.
How much did you weigh?
About 190.
What's the shortest dude on the tour?
We were talking, what's the shortest, like absolute shortest?
Is there any like 5'4 dudes?
5'6, 5'7.
Emelson's right there with the shortest guys.
There's no dudes who are so short where you're like,
hmm, I wonder if he goes in the dwarf category.
No one like that?
No.
Mason Ford, probably another one.
I think he may be an inch taller than Emerson, though.
Yeah, him and Emerson are very similar in stature, I'd say.
Any chance to – is there any concern about drugs on there i mean
everyone looks so svelte and i kind of liked your analysis of um in one of the videos i saw that
getting stronger isn't necessarily and may not equate to a better throwing but any how about
what about weed do they test for that yeah they don't they don't test for anything in disc golf
which um i would like to see that you know become a thing at some point they don't they don't test for anything in disc golf which um i
would like to see that you know become a thing at some point i don't think it's cost effective at
you know at the level disc golf's at i think it would be too expensive um unfortunately but
i mean yeah i mean there are definitely substances that that get used um i don't know like what like
adderall like something to help you with your focus?
Like Adderall or something like that? Well, I think stuff like that would be more beneficial
than like steroids. Right. Well, I don't know. I even think weed might be better. Like people
don't say weed is performance enhancing, but I feel like if it calms people's nerves and can
help them with folks and stuff like that, I feel like it could be a performance enhancing one.
How about nicotine? That's obviously a legal,
a legal drug though.
So I would think nicotine to chew.
I would think,
or do a lot of guys chew?
Um,
I don't think you can actually,
so I don't think you can actually use any of that stuff during the
competition.
So,
you know,
I think people might maybe smoke a little bit before they go play off.
They chew,
they maybe choose to be true before they go play.
Um,
but during the ice competition,
I don't think it's actually allowed.
What if someone wanted to take like a THC edible?
How could you regulate that?
I mean, yeah, they, I mean, they can't, they really can't.
I mean, yeah.
Is there something that I've always been curious about?
Is it, well, you have another question about Drug 7.
Yeah, yeah.
So you don't think there's any guys with nicotine pouches while they're on the tour?
Like out there?
If there is any –
That should help you focus tremendously.
I wonder if that's illegal in baseball.
I didn't – is it illegal in baseball?
I don't think it is.
Someone will know in the comments.
I didn't is it illegal in baseball. I don't think it is someone will know in the comments. Oh
If there are guys using it they've done a good job of not letting me see
So I don't maybe I don't pay good enough attention
right, but
Are you guys pretty close the group the guys on tour
It's definitely I feel like this golf's a lot closer than most sports just because most people travel, you know, all over the same spots.
You know, we camp out.
A lot of people kind of stay in the same parking lot in our vans,
and we see each other on practice rounds.
And so I think the pro disc golf community, I guess,
does see each other a lot more often than maybe other sports.
So I'm not friends with everybody, but we definitely know, we definitely are familiar with everybody.
I mean, in general, I'm very impressed with sportsmanship, at least that's shown outwardly.
I mean, even in this past week, you know, these guys are in a very like contentious, it's very close.
Every shot matters.
There's some people getting good breaks, bad breaks, having good holes, bad holes.
People react to those things differently.
But when it comes down to it, like it's not very much time that passes and fist bump,
great shot smiles.
Like it's, it's really quite impressive.
At least what it appears from my end.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would say, I would say I would say the vast majority
of people on tour
are at the very least
like,
quotable with each other,
you know,
so like,
at least like,
friendly on a certain level.
And then like,
last weekend,
Adam and Aaron
battling it out,
you know,
they're pretty good friends
outside of disc golf.
And so I think that
is probably maybe
what you saw.
Even more of that,
like,
you know
friendsmanship I guess how about when tiger gave that dude a slip that dude a tampon do you remember
that recently I do oh I actually watched that that I watched one of the days live in Bolson
that's that's so good yeah it's so good it's so good you got back you got backlash it's like oh fuck those people hey any any shenanigans
like that going on uh you know like maybe like um spray something on someone's disc so it smells
like something you know like perfume or any any um no i mean i think the most maybe we should step
up our game and do more of that but i think think the most we'll see is, like, somebody maybe on the card previous or the card behind us or whatever.
We'll throw a good shot and maybe somebody will, like, put some grass on top of our desk to kind of, like, try to hide it.
Oh.
Or a stick or something.
You could put, you could take a permanent marker and write something on someone's desk that fucks them up, too.
Like, you have a tiny cock or, you know what I mean?
Just like.
Just as they would oh sure well like all two seasons ago there was this like hot
dog banding going around stamping or like a hot dog on people's discs uh-huh so he's like you know
when people like warming up you'd like pick up the rest and stamp it and like for the longest time
nobody knew who it was oh wow and wow i guess that's that's probably that's maybe that's the biggest like janice shanigans
did anyone ever find out who did it yeah uh jeremy coaling finally confessed and did he get in
trouble no it was just like a funny light-hearted thing it wasn't jeremy coaling seven you know who
that is he he does the commentary for the jomez videos that we watch and review he's a taller guy
kind of a silly guy and he's been around forever
and from what i can understand pretty much well liked by everyone so he's like the perfect person
to kind of pull off something like that yeah um 2000 so so do you do you consider yourself um a
professional uh disc golfer? I do, yeah.
Yeah.
That's how I get paid.
And did you consider yourself that before you were one?
Like when you had ambitions to be one going back to like 2017?
Let's even go back a little further.
When were you just like, okay, you were telling the story,
you were like, I can do this, and then you saw Paul McBeth
and you had to scratch your head and be like, okay.
Yeah.
Did you have to have like a, uh, I don't know, come to Jesus mom, like, fuck, I'm going
to commit everything to this.
What are my parents going to think?
Is this really what I want to do with my life?
Right.
Yeah.
That's a good question.
I mean, um, yeah, I did have that moment.
I think I had that moment pretty soon after watching Paul play in person.
And I kind of had that,
I had that make that switch in my head of this is what I'm doing.
All this is what I'm not doing.
I wouldn't have called myself a professional at that point just cause I,
you know, I hadn't, I hadn't made any money in it.
I hadn't competed.
I hadn't really done it.
I just,
I kind of treated it like a job for like two years before actually
competing. So I kind of, did you have a for like two years before actually competing.
Did you have a day job at that point?
No.
Just burning through your reserves.
Yeah, exactly.
I lived cheap.
I lived with my brothers in an apartment, so rent wasn't too expensive.
Didn't spend a lot of money on food.
But yeah, I practiced for a couple of years, not as a professional or anything.
Just kind of pretending like I'm already a professional
And practicing as if that's my job
And then I played for
About nine months or so
Kind of on the local level in the Dakotas
In professional events
But I wouldn't call myself a professional at that point either
Just because the term professional disc golfer
Was kind of a loose term in disc golf
Because you have touring professionals You have local golfer was kind of a loose term in disc golf
because you have touring professionals you have local pros it's all kind of all over the place
um maybe maybe like halfway into my first season on tour is probably when i would be like okay i'm
cashing at every event you know i'm i'm playing every weekend this is that maybe that's when i
would say that i was a professional was it it around that time that anyone started reaching out in terms of sponsorships,
or did that take a little longer?
Yeah, that took towards the end of the season.
Maybe just a few months.
End of 2019?
2020.
2020, okay.
Yeah, so for 2019, let's see,
2019, I just played local stuff,
mostly until the very, very end.
And then I kind of went to Texas and just before the season.
And then 2020, I played kind of okay
throughout most of the season.
And then I had a few kind of events happen in a row
where I kind of popped off and got some recognition.
And then I got some people kind of reaching out to me and then didn't,
didn't commit to anything for the rest of the season.
And then at the end of 2020 that's when I made the decision to go with,
with this craft.
But actually before,
so before 20,
the 2020 season,
I played a tournament in Texas with Nate Perkins and then he put in a gold,
good word for me with OTB.
So they actually sponsored me for the whole 2020 season.
Oh.
Yeah, so that was super clutch.
Nate Perkins seems like a genuinely good dude.
For sure, yeah.
Jeffrey Birchfield, Major League Baseball's 2016 collective bargaining agreement
banned the use of smokeless tobacco, including tubing tobacco, for all new big league players.
Oh, for the new guys.
Okay, so the guys who are addicted already got to, like, finish out.
Yeah, I ain't hating on that.
That shit.
Interesting.
You ever fuck around with nicotine, Ezra?
You ever smoke cigarettes or no?
No, never have.
Man, that stuff is –
Seve, did you show him that lady who missed a shot by... He's talking about Evelina Salanen, hole 17 at Wake.
Did you know... Oh, look it. He cringed a little bit.
I've seen some shots, but here's the thing.
I'll cringe at the shots, but at the same time, I've missed some putts pretty badly too.
So it's like, I don't know.
Dude, the guy who won this tournament last week in Portland, ultimately,
he had one of the worst putts I've ever seen, like three or four holes before he won it.
He just hit the biggest tree right in front of him.
It happens.
Right.
Yeah.
Oh, that was insane that he had to make the putt from inside the tree, I think.
Yeah. Yeah.
So this period, so you're touring. You're trying to – oh, sorry, sorry. I want to go back a little bit more.
So these two years that you're just practicing golf, is it basically like you're in this apartment with your brothers,
you wake up in the morning, you eat your food, and then you have a regimen you go on. Okay, I'm going to practice putting for an hour. I'm going to practice drives for an hour. I'm then
going to nap for an hour, then I'm going to work out, and then I'm going to go back and I'm going
to practice more drives. Was it like that for just two years? Yeah, it wasn't that structured,
but yeah, on that level,
I guess it was a lot of
technique work, so I would
spend most of my time
in front of my phone camera
just doing slow motion
shots and slowing it down and trying to really
iron out my throws.
I was in a basement
thrown into a tult that I hung up
in my parents' old house.
Um, but yeah, so I remember then were people tripping on you?
What do you mean?
What do you mean by tripping on me?
Like, it just seems like such a, it's so, um, on one level it's so extreme.
Like, Hey, I'm going to put my life on hold for two years and I'm going to
refine some motions using an iPhone.
Are you a Droid guy?
I am.
I was actually an iPhone guy at the time, though.
Holy shit.
Pause.
You went from an iPhone to a Droid?
Yeah.
How come?
Good question.
I don't know because now the Android is the same price as the iPhone. So it's not really like a cost. It's not a good question. I don't know because like now the, the, the Android is the same price as the iPhone.
So it's not really like a cost.
It's like, it's not a cost move.
Um, I think the specs, the specs, the Android has is better.
Um, and then like now I've gotten used to the, the, to the UI of the Android.
So I'm, I'm more familiar with how everything works.
Wow.
And I prefer it.
You know, the iPhone people hate you because you fuck up all
the like group text threads oh yeah definitely this morning i had to tell the producer of the
show i'm like hey can you text them a link because i don't have cell service at my house
and i only so i can only text people who are on wi-fi okay or or who have an iphone and i'm like
god damn it this guy yeah Wow, that's impressive.
I didn't know people went that way.
I didn't know people went iPhone to Android.
Go ahead.
You got to try it out.
I agree.
You're bold.
You are a unique man.
You're a renaissance man, dude.
There's no doubt.
Go ahead.
Go ahead, Brian.
You said that you hung up a tarp, you throw into a tarp,
and I think sometime in the last month or so,
Cole Redallin did an interview where he said,
anyone who's trying to get good, I would recommend throwing into a net. and i think sometime in the last month or so cole redallin did an interview where he said anyone who's trying to get good i would recommend throwing into a net does that actually work like for me seeing the flight of the disc is very meaningful what is the benefit
of throwing into a tarp or a net yeah i would say that the scene of fight of the disc is definitely
beneficial but when it's like 20 degrees below zero and it's like you know four feet of snow
outside it's not really an option so that's that's
where the you know throwing into a net is kind of the best option at the very least you can still
film yourself and see what your mechanics are and kind of have an idea of if you're hitting the
right points and having the right technique so you can still have some benefit but maybe not quite as
good as as seeing the disc fly one other benefit too is you don't have to pick the disc up so that
that can add a lot of time as far as having to go pick up the discs,
run back, throw them again.
You'd film it at 240?
You'd film it at 240?
120?
Man, it's been so long.
Yeah, probably
240. And then project it onto
a TV, like AirPlay it, or just actually
watch it on the phone? I would just watch it on my phone.
I could just scrub.
I used Huddle Technique. I watch it on the phone? I would just watch it on my phone. Yeah, because then I could just scrub, and like I had a,
I used Puddle Technique,
I think it was the app I used,
so I could like compare them, I could put my
video right next to like Simon
Lizotte, or Will Hustrick, or whoever it was
that I thought had really good form, and then I could
compare and see if I was getting to the same
positions. Ezra,
I apologize, the
chat has turned hostile towards you. Let's read a few
of these. Oh, boy.
Here's one. Android is so much better
than iPhone. Let's go, Sean.
This one's going to hurt.
This one's going to hurt a little. You ready?
Anita Dickamy. I bet
he likes Pepsi.
Wow. That's vicious.
Oh, here we go. I'm not sure
if this is good or bad. Droid guy and a vegan. Yeah, it's getting weird. I think that's vicious uh oh here we go i'm not sure if this is good or bad droid guy and a vegan yeah
it's it's getting weird i think that's positive i'm gonna take it positive all right take it take
it how you want um uh what what about uh um so so so you're doing that for two years and in
periodically you're doing local tournaments you said You poked your head out of the basement? No. No, not for two-year-olds.
No, for the four-year-olds, I figured it was –
I kind of wanted to get my foundation of my disc golf game strong enough
to where when I went and played tournaments,
I had that base to build off of.
I felt like if I went and just played tournaments right away,
I wouldn't – it wouldn't be as easy to focus on technique.
I would maybe limit my ceiling as far as not getting the distance I wanted off the tee. You know, so I'd
focus more just like playing, playing tournaments well, instead of like having my technique good
to where I could throw 550 feet. And then when I get to the top level, like having that would be a
benefit. Brian, what's up with this dude? He's like a mad scientist there's all these like did you ever see his
video brian with the prius uh probably not okay so basically what he did is he sets up a prius
and he and and he puts a there's a he sets up a prius so that there's a wire that goes from the
front basically to the back where he can put a crock pot right a quick cooker where he can boil
beans while he's driving right and then he has and then he has a seat that lays down where he can put a crock pot, right? A quick cooker, where he can boil beans while he's driving, right?
And then he has a seat that lays down where he can sleep in it.
So he has this thing where he basically drives from tournament to tournament,
flipping on a switch, cooking beans.
He gets there, dinner's ready, he eats and goes to sleep
and plays the next tournament.
I mean, it's like, and then now, why two years, Brian?
Pretend like he's not here.
Is he crazy?
Two years he's working in the lab before he takes his Ferrari out for a test ride?
Is that what I mean?
Honestly, I think it probably parallels to a lot of different disciplines.
If you are passionate about something and you want to be confident in it when you present it forward-facing,
that you've got to put in the time to refine it. And I think,
you know, there are elements of being in a live competition setting that are difficult to replicate
in your basement, you know, the pressure of the moment and how to calm the nerves when there's,
you know, cameras on or people watching. But if you can lean into two years worth of practice,
and you can, you know, you know, there's still a mental discipline to be able to do that. But if
you're confident in the stroke that you've been developing over that time, I think that, you know, you know, there's still a mental discipline to be able to do that. But if you're confident in the stroke that you've been developing over that time, I think that, you know, it is a good foundation to lean on, you know, when when you have to start to learn some of those other skills.
While you're doing that, are you second guessing yourself as you're watching your money supply dwindle?
And are there days you wake up and you're like fuck what am i doing
i don't think so no because it's basically you didn't get to cash a check for a long time i mean
i mean that metaphorically like you don't it's just like working on your car working on your
car but you never get to see it just like race right yeah no i mean i didn't i didn't really
make any um i didn't really make any money until yeah it a half years, I guess, when I made some money in local tournaments, which didn't pay super well.
I don't know. I was pretty confident in it. I knew it would take time.
I kind of expected that I'd have to go through that period of not seeing the immediate return.
have to go through the through that period of like not seeing the immediate return um but i feel like it's i feel like it's something that a lot of people that um i guess chase their dreams kind
of have to go through you know like you know we see people in all those sports at the top of the
game playing whatever on that's what we see but we don't really see what goes into it and i feel
like a lot of people have to have that that that period where they put a lot into it without the retone in order to get the retone later on.
You've even curated your Instagram account to be really disc golf specific to basically everything's washed off of it, right?
You've archived everything pre, pre, pre disc golf.
Yeah, I didn't actually have Instagram before disc golf.
So I got, I got instagram because of this golf
wow crazy god hey dude you're a good catch you don't have girls um do you sabotage relationships
um are you like how come how come someone hasn't yeah i probably do
oh okay i don't know i mean like your expectations are too high of girls like like like you meet them
and like she's everything's perfect,
but you see one quirky thing and you're like,
fuck,
this isn't going to work for 50 years.
Uh,
you're out.
Um,
I don't know.
I mean,
I'm a little,
I'm a little cynical.
I'm a little cynical of relationships in general,
which isn't,
I don't like about it,
but,
um,
I don't know.
I think,
I think the main thing,
I don't think I necessarily look at the goals I've gone on dates with and like see the flaws or whatever as something that I can't know. I think the main thing, I don't think I necessarily look at the goals I've gone
on dates with and see the flaws or whatever
as something that I can't
overcome or whatever.
I think I'm mostly,
at least at this point in my life, I'm mostly looking at myself
and thinking that I'm still not
ready for that with where I'm at
in my career and what my goals are.
I feel like I wouldn't be able to dedicate
enough time to a relationship.
Ezra has nice hands.
It's probably also just like
if you do meet someone at a tournament
and there's a little bit of a spark or you have a date,
it's probably easier to just
a week or two from there, just like
unintentionally,
intentionally forget to respond to some text
and be like, sorry, I got busy on the tour.
That's a legitimate thing that you can kind of say,
like,
like I believe that.
And then just never kind of respond again.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean,
I try to be,
you know,
I've,
I try to be clear,
kind of going into like,
if I do meet a goal,
the gym or whatever,
I try to be clear on kind of say like,
you know,
I,
I travel all the time.
So like,
I can't really change relationship right now,
but if I was a girl,
I would just take that as a challenge.
I would fuck you up.
That's the problem. I think they might
like that.
I don't know the women's psyche.
I want to apologize because
I've now realized
this is probably true for every guest, but
now you're probably going to go on a
10-year run until you come on this podcast
again that you've never had.
This is the best podcast you're ever going to be on for the next 10 years.
I apologize.
It's all right.
We got to hit those highs sometime.
Your Frisbee golf career will continue to excel, but this is –
Okay, here we go.
Ezra has nice hands from Sleeky.
Anita Dick in me.
It's probably that I cook beans in my car.
Are you kidding me?
When I was living in my car, I was slain.
Has he considered OnlyFans?
Have you ever considered OnlyFans account?
I have gotten a few comments.
You know, like if I post a showless picture or something,
then people will be like,
oh, is this like your false advertisement for OnlyFans or whatever?
Yeah, that could be super slow.
Oh, would you date a meat eater?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've gone on dates with people
who eat meat, for sure.
Jeffrey Birchfield, what size shoe
does he wear? Big hands, big feet.
Asking for Heidi.
11 and a half.
Oh, okay. Yeah, that is a
big foot.
So you,
Matt Burns, 10-year run.
He ain't coming back, if that's the case. I can tell, 10-year run. He ain't coming back if that's the case.
He is.
I can tell.
10-year reunion, of course.
You have to.
No, he'll be on before that.
Okay.
So you're two years in the lab.
You come out.
You do, in 2019, you do some local tournaments.
You're happy with what you see
no i was worse than i thought i was oh actually still so like yeah after all the basement you're
a bad dude in the basement outside the basement yeah yeah well so like after two years i played
my first event i just kind of signed up for it and went and played it and my fourth round was
actually really good.
I shot, for people who know ratings, I guess I shot like 1,016.
I think it was my first rating ever.
And I was like, oh, okay, sick.
I can make this.
This is good.
Second round was like quite a bit worse.
And then the last round, I could not make a putt to save my life.
I shot like 920.
And I lost by two strokes.
And the first round is on a Friday, then a Saturday, then a Sunday.
So, okay, so it was one weekend you got this feedback. Okay. Yeah. It might have even been a two on Saturday, one on Sunday type of deal. my life i felt like 9 20 i lost my first round is on a friday then a saturday then a sunday so okay
so it was one weekend you got this feedback okay yeah it might have even been a two on saturday one
on sunday type of deal um but yeah so then i was like oh wow well like there's so much of my game
that's that sucks like i can i can obviously throw further than the competition at the local level
but everything else my game is is holding me back so then I had to kind of shift my focus of where my practice was into all that
side of the game to really build that. And then I'm still, I'm always,
I'm kind of always still in the lab. That's just kind of a,
a never ending process.
And how do you become a pro that Brian was saying that there's like 80 or 90
guys you guys were discussing who are on the pro,
how do you make it from the b team or what's that process yeah um so
right now um we're still at a point where if your rating is high enough at the local level
and you're fast enough to sign up for these pro tour events you can sign up
okay so usually what will happen is is that you know the tournament might have 110 spots and 80 of those are going to be pro tools um to our card holding spots and you've
got you know 20 or 30 spots left over for whoever else wants to sign in and if your rating is high
enough you can you can sign up right away and then if not enough 10 20 plus people sign up then it'll
open up to like 10 10 after a week or so so you know you're waiting high enough you can actually
play in the pro tour events and that's how you can you know play a whole season on the
pro tour get the tour called for the next season hopefully and then kind of just keep going from
there do you try and so one and then once you're on you're on for how long like do you ever get
concerned so you've been on the pro circuit in the clique for three years now? Yep.
Do you ever get concerned that you could fall out?
I haven't had that concern yet.
There was like 80 spots, and I think my fall season on 2R was 21st in standings,
and then like 11th and then 14th.
Okay.
And how about your first year going on the tour were they welcoming to you
where people do people haze you a little bit test you i don't think so no i mean i kept i kept mostly
to myself you know i didn't really know anybody on too long so i just kind of stuck to myself and
my prius my beans and stuff um and then yeah i mean people were always nice i don't think
i don't think i had to go through any hazing rituals.
How about – did you ever break any etiquette?
Like you set your discs or your bag in the wrong spot,
in the spot that always Paul McBeth set his bag,
and so someone came over like, dude, that's Paul's spot.
No, I don't think so.
No.
Okay.
And in this – so now you've been doing it three years, and how many tournaments will you play typically in a year?
About 25.
Wow. And is that 25 – is that every other week, consecutive weeks?
Yeah, it varies a little bit.
Sometimes we'll go back to back.
Maybe have three events in a row at most.
And then have, you know, we'll have off weeks kind of sprinkled in.
It's like a nine, nine and a half month period.
Well, we all play 20, 25 events.
24 this year, though, because you didn't get into the Champions Cup.
That's true.
Yeah.
It still holds.
Thanks for the memory. Well, I was hesitant to bring it up.
I know it's,
but I didn't understand it.
I'm like,
yeah,
I mean,
I don't,
I don't know how it works.
Like,
why weren't you able to play in that tournament?
Yeah,
it was kind of just an unfortunate,
it was kind of a,
a few unfortunate things that,
that happened.
Um,
so that was one way.
Oh,
this is like a month ago okay yeah yeah we
didn't we didn't automatically get signed up when we signed up for the tour card because that was a
major and um yeah it was kind of its own thing i guess we didn't get we didn't get signed up
automatically for that so we had to actually go in and sign up for that event when the registration
opened which was like a week-long period and there wasn't a great job done of letting us players know when that was,
which was kind of odd.
But most people signed up, so I do take responsibility, obviously,
for not hitting that window.
So I missed that window.
The tournament fills up.
Me and like 15 other tour card holders didn't sign up.
And so we're obviously frustrated with that.
We reached out to the TDs. People are a little obviously frustrated with that. We reached out to the TDs.
You know, people are a little bit frustrated.
Why would you reach out to the TDs?
Always reach out to the TDs.
What are you talking about?
All right, all right, all right.
No, the tournament drag don't.
Oh, the TDs.
Sorry, my bad.
TDs, yeah, yeah.
Okay, my bad.
You hear what you want here.
I can't blame you.
Yes, yes, yes.
But so we ended up – they ended up having a qualifying event on the Monday before
the tournament for eight spots.
So there was like 25 guys playing for eight spots.
I did not have my best day.
Did they create that tournament specifically because so many people had missed it or was
that tournament already in existence?
No, no, it was just like, yeah, that, that qualifying event was just because so many
people missed signups.
Well, I think, I think what happened is the PDGA realized that they also messed up
and didn't do a good enough job at letting people know.
So they're like, well, we got to do something to let some of these people in
just to kind of help with the PR side of it.
So yeah, just didn't have my best day.
So I had opportunities to qualify for the event even after missing signups,
which was nice for the PDGA to allow and uh just didn't didn't have my best day now sometimes like oh
you told me about that i think you text me you said oh yeah he wasn't the only top top player
that didn't it wasn't right in that tournament and that the qualifying tournament he's talking
about if you go look at the like the leaderboard like there are a lot of good and well-recognized players playing in that.
But you finished second at Las Vegas Challenge.
That wasn't good enough to get you a spot in?
No, that was not one of the ways to qualify.
That qualified me for the UOP Open and the UFGC, though.
It was nice.
Well, hopefully they'll clean that up next
year because, I mean, especially at the majors, it feels
like it should be
a very low barrier of entry for the tour
players to get in. Right. Yeah,
I think they will. I think they got some
negative
feedback. You know, I mean, like, there was
some of us top guys that didn't qualify.
Kevin Jones didn't make it in the qualifier. Andrew Malweed. I mean, there was there was some top some of us top guys that didn't qualify kevin jones didn't didn't make it in the qualifier um andrew mallweed i mean there was there was a
handful of guys that people expect to see when they go out and spectate and they didn't get to
because of that um that that's almost all year you play if you're playing 25 uh tournaments
yeah it's about nine nine ten months
what do you do during the week is it do you play every do you play frisbee every day tournaments? It's about 9-10 months.
What do you do during the week?
Do you play Frisbee every day?
Do you throw the Frisbee every day?
Almost every day, yeah.
Do you ever throw a disc craft?
Do you ever throw an Ultimate Frisbee disc anymore?
Ever?
No. No.
Would that be bad?
It would recalibrate your arm and your brain.
You don't want to do that.
Yeah.
I mean,
you know,
some of the,
some of the people on tour will kind of play catch in the parking lot with
it,
with a Frisbee.
So it's probably not super detrimental,
but it is a little bit different throw.
So I'm not,
I don't know.
I would be down to like play an ultimate Frisbee game.
I think it'd be fun.
I don't think it'd be too detrimental,
but,
um,
Brody does actually play with like, uh, a little slight shrunken version of an ultimate disc
Which is like kind of halfway between an ultimate disc and a disc off disc
So okay, I'll pull boss that out sometimes in woods for who makes that
This craft as well. What is it? It's like it's a super old old disc
But it has you know, it has a different flight just a little bit straight on because it's
the way it's shaped and stuff do you have to can you do you have to play with um um those discs the the frisbee uh frisbee disc golf discs or could you play with just a regular disc i think an
ultimate frisbee disc is pj approved so it has to be as long as it's, yeah, as long as it's PDJ approved, it counts.
The Ultradisc, I think, was approved a long time ago before the discs changed, you know, vastly.
So I think it's kind of grandfathered in.
So I'm not sure if like a Wham-O would be PDJ approved.
This is something I was going to ask you about a while ago when we were talking about drugs.
What are the limitations on the number of discs and the kind of discs that you can use in a PDGA event?
Like another guy following you with like three bags? Yeah, I don't think there's any type of amount that is limited.
So I think if you wanted to have five
bags on your back and carry 100 discs,
you probably could.
The disc has
requirements. The
shape of the rim has to be a certain way, and it can't
be too fast or too
shallow. The flight plate has
to be specific.
So there's all those requirements that make
up the disc,
but as far as how many you can actually take,
that's not part of the game.
Is there too many discs you could bring on
to where it becomes like a headache?
Do you ever like, fuck, I shouldn't have brought this many?
I'm overthinking everything now.
I should have just stuck to...
That might be.
I mean, yeah, that definitely could be a thing.
I definitely carried more discs last
season um it is an interesting one because you know there are some players that carry quite a
bit less discs and some that carry quite a bit more and so those kind of benefits to both you
know you can if you carry more discs you can kind of just stick to one angle and let the disc change
the flight or if you carry less discs you can just kind of trust one disc
and know exactly how that flies and then manipulate it with your throw.
So kind of depending on how you like to attack the game,
you can kind of cue out your bag to that.
It seems like it would become an obsessive compulsive issue.
I mean, that video of you when you lift up the –
when you're in the RV, you're in the discraft RV,
and you open the trunk.
I mean, that's crazy.'s crazy. There's over 100 discs
in there.
I have 100 discs
in my trunk alone.
You too, Brian? You have
100 discs in your trunk?
We get addicted
quick. They just pile up.
I've been giving them away recently.
I was playing a
local course the other day and there was just some young kids playing and they're like hey can we
throw a disc and i let them throw it and then these they ended up being in the parking lot with
me after the round and so i just gave them each a putter and a driver that i'd like found over the
years nice um any any crazy stories you have where like like you're well Let me ask Is there weed wafting through the air
The entire time
No
Come on
Have you ever played
Nine holes and not
Smelt weed
Yeah
On the pro tour
It's not
It's not that
It's not that super common.
Maybe if you go to the parking lot after the round,
some people will be partaking, so you'll get some of those wafts.
Is it frowned upon?
It's definitely more on the local level.
Is it frowned upon or is it okay?
I don't think it's super frowned upon.
As long as it's not in the actual event, it's not really a problem.
Yeah, you can't go anywhere in California.
Hey, did you see any zombies when you were in Portland?
Was Portland scary?
Portland's going downhill.
Portland was great.
I don't know.
I talked to my brother before, and he was like,
you have to tell me how Poland is.
It's supposed to be really bad.
And it was fine.
I did not see any zombies.
So I'm on the apocalypse. Absent of whatever is actually happening in Portland, to be really bad and uh it was fine i didn't see i did not see any zombies to the fox lips
absent of whatever is actually happening in portland that course looks amazing dude it is
glendale's what i like both courses and then obviously just the fact that it's on such of
like a well-maintained golf course and you have these massive trees and the grass is cut and you
have mountain hood in the background it's yeah it's it's one of
the most um I would say I would say you liked the east course five times better because you had five
times fewer bogeys on it yeah that definitely helped I definitely scored better on the east
course so I liked it better this weekend I knew we were doing this this podcast with you I just
got back from Germany for a CrossFit competition so I was like trying to keep up with the Portland open over,
uh,
in like the nights and stuff.
And if I'm not mistaken,
um,
I think,
I don't know if it was Proctor or Corey,
but someone made a putt on 18 that prevented you being on Joma's coverage
for the last round or lead card for the last round.
Like it was super close.
It was super close.
I think you were on the,
like you were on the border.
I think you missed by one
spot and i was like really hoping when i saw you making the charge i was like man i hope he gets
on lead coverage that'd be so cool if that happened right before we played i mean it's really
difficult to get on the lead card in any tournament these days right yeah yeah i wasn't paying a ton
of attention but that definitely could have been the case i know olden olden harrells was a spot
above me on chase carl so he would have been the first to bump up.
But maybe there was two guys that
needed to miss a putt or something.
I think the top three were pulling away.
I think it was whatever Proctor
did on the last hole.
For months leading into the Portland
tournament, Jomez
would have these commercials, or someone would
put the commercials on Jomez and be like,
we love Portland. He would whisper that. And I would always whisper back to the tv no you don't no one does
but you were in a good spot you were in a good spot you're wait what they whispered they whisper
yeah you love portland oh you know what i mean like it would be a commercial be like
for some reason they were really hyping that tournament for months. Yeah, that was the false Elite Plus event.
So we've got Majors, we've got Elite events, we've got Silver events,
Sanaj Blow, and this is the false you're having a tournament
between Elite and Major.
So just for the perspective, a normal PDGA tournament,
the winner gets 100 points.
And the Silver Series is half the points, so you get
50. In a major, is it 200 if you
win?
A major is 150.
So a major is the same, actually, as
the Elite Plus. But I think the
approach of all kind of wanted to really boost these Elite Plus
events and make them special.
Do you know how many there will be this year?
Just two. Portland and which other one?
Ledgestone in Illinois.
I live in Illinois.
Maybe I should come for that tournament.
There you go.
Thayson Hopper, Savant seems lost in this conversation.
I feel like he's just waiting to make a joke.
Listen, Thayson, that's because you just came back from Rich Froning's podcast
and there's a dollop of semen clogging your ears and eyes.
Ezra, what do you think? Do you ever use caddies in your tournaments?
Not this season.
Let's see.
My parents were at
the tournament in Waco.
I had a really bad false round.
I was like, if you want a caddy,
you can come caddy for me for the last two rounds.
I actually played battle for those two rounds.
Maybe I should go back to a caddy.
Last season, I had my brother Judah caddy all me for the last two rounds and actually play battle for those two rounds maybe i should go back to a caddy last season i had my brother judah caddy all all throughout the year um and
then this year i've been going i've just been going solo for most of it i mean even in tournaments
even in tournaments i play in if i have someone available to caddy i'll usually let them do it
it's not like i don't feel stressed by carrying the bag around and obviously you know we
we spend some time in the gym so so physically it shouldn't be an issue.
But for me, it's sometimes just to have a sounding board,
just to be like, should I run this?
Or is it, you know, whatever.
I can't imagine you liking a caddy, Brian.
Well, Scott Polanski, you just got to find the right person.
I think if you find the right person, it can be really helpful.
But when I observe and watch disc golf,
like I'll just use Paul McBeth as an example. It seems seems like he hardly ever uses a caddy but then at the biggest tournaments
he has so i'm always curious how players decide to make that decision yeah like i know he has the
same guy at european open california that he's had for like the last decade um so i it's it's the
caddy thing is very specific on the pulse i think that's maybe probably why i haven't been using it this season is just because i don't necessarily want to just have
somebody that i don't know on the bag just because i'm not sure how the dynamical walk i don't know
how they're going to be and act and stuff so i don't really want the the added stress from that
um side of it i mean i think there are some benefits i think obviously you know not having
to carry the bag is probably a benefit on the endurance side of it and the physicality side.
I don't know.
I think I think, too, for me, like just being alone with my thoughts is sometimes better than having somebody to talk to.
I'm not I'm not a player that needs to talk throughout the whole round.
You know, I'm kind of fine just keeping to myself.
Yeah, I think I feel the same.
But, you know, there's and there's just some a few moments.
So it's it's having someone that's like, hey, let me be, if I need something, I'll let you know.
And then in one or two moments where it comes up that I can just ask that question and get
like an affirmation from someone that I know has my best interest in mind.
Yeah. You should, when you were in Portland, um, Ezra and I'm judging you for this,
you should have hired a stripper to be your caddy in order to help the economy and give them opportunities outside of her traditional field.
His or her, his or her.
Oh, sorry. Either one.
Either one. It was very, very.
That would have been, I mean, that would have been news all day.
I would have been buzzy in this call.
I just, I'm sorry.
I watched the last dance with magic Mike on the plane. So, you know,
male strippers exist too.
Thank you, Brian. I appreciate you keeping the show inclusive. Hey, last dance with magic mike on the plane so you know male strippers exist too thank you brian i
appreciate you keeping the show inclusive hey ezra what's the what's the protocol for like doing
podcasts and media and like with with the dudes on the tour like like do they do them do you do
them midweek do they do some guys do no media like is it hard getting the guys to come on the show
like do podcasts like what's their Do podcasts? What's the deal?
Why are you doing a podcast?
Why did you do this?
Just bored?
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess it's not super uncommon for people to do podcasts.
Brody Smith and Paulie Libioi both play almost every event, and they've also got one of the most popular podcasts in disc golf
that they actually produce.
They started doing that for the Tour Life, and they started doing it this year, right?
Yeah, Tour Life podcast.
And so they get guests on every single week, that play, pretty much.
So it's not, I don't know, it's not super uncommon for people to go do podcasts or do media.
I think disc golf is also at a point where it's it's beneficial kind of for everybody to
partake in a lot of that stuff all right we we are you were amongst the the guys that we were
most hoping to get because of some of your lifestyle things that just are you know aligned
with what we often do but we we have reached out to a lot of people and been turned down so
not even turn not turned down just not just that maybe they
just don't check their dm they're not like hey eat a dick they're just but yeah i mean that's
part of it too is like a lot of times the dm will just go into the um requests and so people won't
see stuff but thanks for having me on i mean i appreciate it dude you're the man i i'm sorry i'm
i was an instant fan when i saw you um uh have lots of things to judge you about, and I love judging people.
And you're cool as shit, dude.
Thanks for coming on.
Anytime, if there's anything we can do for you, you want to promote anything,
but either way, we'll be watching from afar,
and then we'll be bugging you to have you on again.
You're an awesome guest.
I bothered Stefan enough about it that he made a commitment to do a review show
for each of the PDGA events and the majors this year.
So we'll be following.
We'll be trying to promote you guys in our space.
And I would like to get out to a tournament eventually.
I've still yet to go to a Disc Golf Pro Tour event.
But if I go, maybe I'll let you know and we could grab a waffle a waffle or something yeah there you go how often do you guys uh get out and play
me none i play like i probably play three four times a week oh wow nice thank you
you know you know what's crazy my neighbor i live out i live out in the country and my neighbor has
a uh five acres right across the street from my house i could play from my front door and he has two two baskets out there right and so we went out there and we were playing i
hadn't played in years and we went out there and started playing every day for like two weeks and
then he put a lock on his gate oh that was the end of my my frisbee golf career well he also lives
like probably a few miles from de la so he could go play yeah that's true
that's a special place for sure all right brother thank you um uh i'd like to stay in touch thanks
for uh i guess thanks for sharing your phone number i'll try to use it sparingly wisely
yeah sounds good thanks again guys appreciate it okay brother have a good one
guys appreciate it okay brother have a good one as raider hold that was cool for me that was very cool dude that was went a thousand times better than i ever imagined that's because you had me
here oh well thank you god well you can i mean i think it was a good balance between who he is and
and how he got to be in this position and then able to you know obviously i i can talk to him
a little bit about the the disc golf stuff that's current and
relevant for him. So I think.
Oh, that he plays disc golf.
I know all your, all you see over there is a, a body and a, and a,
and a story. So.
A body and a homeless guy.
Savon is scared to leave his house per Hiller.
Scared's not the right word, but you're close.
But it's not scared.
Jeez Louise, good job, Savan.
That was good.
Robbie Myers, thanks, Ezra.
Yeah, that dude's cool.
He was cool.
He rolled with it.
Some of your shenanigans, he embraced that.
Yeah.
Very cool guy.
That was cool.
All right, Jack Jones.
Eaton Beaver, watch it, Brian. Confident, not cocky.
I hope that he'll mention to some of the guys,
and maybe we can get another player on here sometime.
Oh, yeah, yeah. I'll start bugging Morgan.
Sleeky, I enjoyed that.
Oh, good.
Sleeky said uh made the observation that
uh aterhold had nice hands
all right um
what are you doing the rest of the day
other a lot of things i'm behind on from traveling for three straight weeks
the really you're behind because your shit's it seems like
you're publishing regularly on the on the um on the be friendly fitness.com and and your youtube
page is up and going most of the stuff on the back end um and when i say i'm behind i'm not
behind on any of the crossfit stuff it It's just like life stuff that I –
and then it's just some other projects that things have been filtering in about
that I would usually keep up to date with on a more regular basis
that I just kind of put on hold for this month.
I was home for I think a total of 50 hours over those three weeks.
Holy shit.
Yep. 50 hours over those three weeks so holy shit yep just wanted to do laundry and sleep and
and pack again um are you gonna uh uh so you basically your primary thing is to get back
to publishing you want to you want to be publishing at a regular cadence uh yes yeah but i mean there's a lot there's a lot to figure out quite frankly all
right all right um do we have any more shows scheduled you and i portland open tomorrow night
oh we do is that tomorrow night that's what i have let me see what's going on
wednesday the 7th i have it at 8.30pm
central time
oh yeah wow
holy cow okay
we're about halfway through the season
so we gotta you know
we gotta keep doing it I think we made a commitment
on behalf of the Sebon podcast
and Be Friendly Fitness we would like to apologize for our 3 week got to keep doing it i think we made a commitment on behalf of the sebon podcast and be friendly
fitness we would like to apologize for our three-week lull in pdga coverage no we didn't
miss anything actually the timing worked out really well where they had there were two silver
series events in this in during that period and then portland open was the last week so we actually
haven't missed on anything that we said we would.
There's another Silver Series event this weekend,
and then they have a tournament the weekend after that.
Can we talk about Brian's voice change on his BeFriendly IG post?
What does that mean?
I don't know.
I think your response was –
you know I had Michelle Michelle Bassnet on here.
Yeah, three hours, three and a half hours or something.
No, no.
No, no, two hours.
Oh, oh, that is true.
There may have been another part of it.
She might not have been on for all three hours.
Yeah, she was on for two.
Where is it, Jethro?
Is it on as BeFriendly or is it on Brian Friend, his voice change?
What is he talking about friend his voice change talking about my voice change
can we talk about his voice change on the be friendly
IG post
I don't see any
posts where you're talking
there's like a
cover image on most of them
so you don't see necessarily
me I don't know how if I like that or not
the cover image yeah because you know then you don't see necessarily me. I don't know if I like that or not.
The cover image?
Yeah, because then you don't know what it is. Well, I would see it had a little play button,
even if it had a cover image, right?
So click on that.
Let's see what it is.
Okay.
And it immediately goes to me.
The semifinals for the 2023 season.
Individuals had the stage all to themselves today.
The women started things off and closed out their competition first.
At most, I don't know if
i would say that there's a voice change maybe it's loud and you're talking loud so the interesting
thing about these is i did it with a different guy every week because we had different people
on the ground so like i did this with patty or and we and it was you know we had to find a spot
yeah there were some things going on i didn't know. I didn't know how much of my body would be visible or not.
It was different every week.
Day two for the teams in Berlin.
Day one for the individuals.
Oh, yeah, your voice is deeper here.
I wouldn't have noticed that, though.
And there was no shortcuts making a big move today.
Third place on both of the tests.
Did someone tell you?
Do you hear your voice different?
No, I was just maybe because like here I've done it so many times
and I know what it sounds like.
And there he was kind of far away from me.
And then I'm not used to doing it with a mic on my shirt like that.
So maybe I was just projecting more.
What's going on with you?
Are you wearing tights underneath a pair of noble shorts?
That's how I dress my kids.
No, I think I just have things in my pocket on the left side that are like making them project.
That's just a pair of noble pants.
I wore them pretty much every single day for three weeks or at least on the days of competition.
Because it's cold inside the venues and actually overall considering the relative warmth of the
cities that we were in orlando los angeles and berlin in the summer you would that you would
expect it wasn't it wasn't that warm at any of those places i think the entire time i was in
california there was like three hours of sun damn that we walked outside i walked outside with tommy
on like saturday afternoon in between events
and there was sun out and i was like oh you guys actually do have sun in california and
he kind of laughed he's like yeah man it's been a pretty shitty week cocaine changes my voice
sports voice powerful voice uh he also put in a giant hands filter oh those aren't your real hands
i think whatever that lens is that he's using,
if you just
extend forward, it really
dramatizes it.
Zach Jones, I love the branding.
Oh, are we
concerned about Justin Medeiros
at the CrossFit Games this year?
No, I think
Tommy actually handled that really
well on the recap we did for talking elite fitness he
basically said it was a nothing burger no he didn't say that he said you know this is seven
seven events it's about half as many as we're used to seeing and he you know if you just look at his
Tommy pulled a stat that said he's never finished lower than 10th on any workouts on the on a
weekend at the CrossFit games so he's usually
getting better as the weekend goes on and even though he's relatively close to the top throughout
he kind of makes his move and accelerates into the top position later in the weekend and he
actually did that at the semifinals too he had his best day on his last day and that was actually
true of quite a few veteran athletes where they had their best day on their last day at semifinals.
And I think that to Tommy's point, you know, if that, if those, that competition, even against
those guys had continued over the next, another seven tests that he might've closed the gap, but
I mean, we cannot ignore how good Vellner and, you know, Vellner in particular, but also Fikowski
looked during that competition. Um, are, are, are you going to pick Vellner and Vellner in particular, but also Fikowski look during that competition.
Are,
are you going to pick Vellner to win the game?
I haven't actually thought too much about the games.
Oh,
that's already a problem right there because it used to be no Justin until
someone beats him.
And now he didn't even let me finish.
Okay.
All right.
But I still,
I still think that he's the favorite.
I still think Justin's the favorite at the games.
Now that he has been beat, I'm off the hook on that one.
Right?
I thought when you said, no, I thought when you said until he's beat,
you were referencing beat at the games.
No, at any competition.
So, for example, if he'd lost at Rogue last year,
I would have considered that being beaten. Semifinals is not the games. No, at any competition. For example, if he'd lost at Rogue last year, I would have considered that being beaten.
Semifinals is not the games.
I do think
Tommy's point is very valid, which is why it's the first
thing that I brought up. I still
think that the consistency he's displayed
across all events and all competitions
over the last two years is
extremely impressive.
The reason why I haven't given too much
thought necessarily to the games yet is I just wanted to let all of the semifinals play out.
You know, they're just to see there's, you know, I, especially being there live,
I feel like there are some things that I learn, whether it's in conversation with coaches or
athletes or, you know, and obviously live, I can see all 10 lanes
the entire time. And I know that on the broadcast, you can't see that. So there's different things
that I can pick up on for certain athletes and certain tests that are critical. You know, I'm,
I'm not looking to learn a ton about Pat Vellner. I know a lot about Pat Vellner, but there's very
specific things that if he were going to win the CrossFit games that I would be on the lookout for
in a semifinal that I can kind of hone in on with regard to him specifically
or Brent or Justin or Sam Quant or any of these guys that I think are
towards the top where the margins are really small.
Someone sent me a text and it says Sarah Sigmund's daughter is Dunzo.
Oh, well, I mean, people are obviously talking about that.
I believe that Andrew made a talking about that i believe that
andrew made a video about that i haven't had a chance to watch it at all but dunzo
you think she's dunzo i don't know what that means i mean dunzo meaning she's never gonna
have a chance to win the crossfit games again no no she's never gonna have a chance to make
the cross yeah yeah yeah or dunzo she's never gonna compete in the sport in any capacity again
she's never gonna make the crossfit games again i Or done so she's never going to compete in the sport in any capacity again?
She's never going to make the CrossFit Games again.
I mean, she's missed it by what?
Basically one movement this year and one spot last year.
I think it's a little bit naive to say she never has a chance to make the Games again.
And in her case in particular, I think there are some things
going on that most people are not aware of.
And I don't want to make any excuses for her, but I don't think it's impossible that she makes the games again.
And she switched to Kotler.
Yeah, I mean, that was a few months ago.
Yeah, but that's interesting also, right?
I mean, she was at a powerhouse training camp, training think tank.
training camp, training think tank?
I mean,
I guess.
I don't know how to quantify necessarily what's going on at the training camps.
I think that it doesn't take a lot of
observation necessarily
to realize that Sarah's made a lot of
coaching changes over the years.
And she likes it, and she thinks it's beneficial for her.
She likes change, right? She likes travel,
and she likes change, and she likes competition. beneficial for her she likes change right she likes travel and she likes change and she likes competition true on all counts yeah i didn't mean it in any derogatory
sense no and i think that you know people often apply apply a perspective to something like that
as a generality and it's like it doesn't it may not work for everyone but it doesn't mean that it can't work for someone uh face and hopper he's back this is just a stepping stone she will come
back stronger than ever many athletes fall off and miss the games and go back to train harder
i believe in her oh what oh go ahead go ahead no you you go ahead what about catching david's
daughter okay well i'm crazy impressed.
I mean, let's just see. So to Thayson's point, I mean, Sarah's not going to be at the games this year.
She wasn't at the games last year.
She wasn't at the games the year before that.
The year before that was an online game.
She finished 21st, so we didn't get to see her live.
The year before that was 2019.
She finished 20th or 19th, so she was cut after five or six events
and then 2018 she withdrew we haven't actually seen sarah complete a crossfit games since 2017
wow that's a really long time i used to work for crossfit back then it's yeah if you want to
parallel it with katrin david's daughter that's fine and actually I think great to do. She missed the games just like Sarah did
by one spot last year. But the year before that was 10th, the year before that was 2nd
4th, 3rd, and then we get to 2017
So in that same time period, Katrin's had two podiums, four top
10s and missed the games once. Sarah's had no, she hasn't even finished
the games a single time.
So it's a little bit different.
What about
Brooke? Are you impressed with
what Katrin did before I switched move?
I'm pretty impressed. I was impressed.
I did think there was a good chance
for her to make the games. I think I picked her in the last
spot in because I just wasn't sure.
You know?
But she was impressive to me. Even if you told me, no, she's going to make it games. I think I picked her in the last spot in because I just wasn't sure, you know, but she was impressive to me.
Even if you told me,
no,
she's going to make it.
I wouldn't have thought she would,
she would finish second and have a chance to win it.
And I do think that my, my like early thoughts about her at the games is that she's a,
she has a chance to make the top 10 again,
based on what I saw and the,
and just how many women are missing from the field this year.
And the fact that, you know, there's certain athletes that are better at the games than
they are otherwise.
And we just kind of referenced that with Justin, but in the case of Katrin too, I think that
game suits her pretty well.
And she's, and she's in a good place in her life.
And I think that, that that's probably the thing that I've learned the most over the
last two years, dealing with athletes in a more personal level is being settled in your life
actually is a huge, huge element of doing well in this sport.
Like Ezra, settled in the Prius.
Jan Clark, Sevan has been at the games more recently than Sarah.
That's a tough stat.
Well, it's not a true stat.
Well, I guess, I don't know.
When was the last time you were at the games?
2019, 2018, 2019.
You weren't there in the, uh, the international year with every.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, I was.
Yeah.
So she was there too.
And in 2020, when it was at the ranch, were you there?
No.
And she would, she didn't make it to the game.
She did the online version.
So I think I was fired by that point.
I think so too.
What am I doing here what am i doing here it's time to move on um okay that was my inner voice i'm getting out a little bit so much to talk about we should just do a show just where i
um just a show with no title where we just talk about some shit.
When do you want to do that?
I don't know.
I'll have Susan contact you.
There's certain topics I'm not that interested in talking about,
as you know,
but you'll talk about anything CrossFit related.
That's likely,
likely true,
but depending on the topic, I may disappoint you.
You don't disappoint. Even when you disappoint me, I'm excited.
I get excited that I touched on something that disappointed you.
Oh, you're not disappointing me. It's just that I'm, you know,
I'm very much interested in, in trying to make this sport great.
And, you know, to do that, you know,
some things that
I just probably want to talk about publicly
thank you everyone
and bye bye