
July 26th, 2011, 07:20 AM
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Join Date: May 1st, 2009
Location: Spokane Valley Washington
Posts: 1,529
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Now there is a certain amount of risk reward to the thumber/tomahawk. If you use the two meter rule, the chance of taking a stroke by trying to throw a thumber into or over the tree line goes up exponentially. I've lost more discs in those evilly thick tree's at Farragut from overhands than I have from any other shot selection. One more thing, I doubt anybody would tell Brian Schweberger that his thumber doesn't take skill. He can throw every kind of shot with a thumber. That is skill.
Now that I have gone that route, I don't throw but a few overhands a round. Not that I can't and not that I don't have a killer thumber. It's more along the lines of I'd like to continue playing this game as I get older instead of remembering the times I played till I tore my shoulder apart from throwing overhands.
I still think the best way to go about this whole situation is to sit down with Jack and the players and decide what would be the best and most challenging situation. I know that if you had some ob rope and some mando's in certain area's, you'd definitely see some score variation. Something to think about.
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"Honest work is for the downtrodden and the Polish"
Cleveland Brown
Last edited by General Scales; July 26th, 2011 at 07:21 AM.
Reason: Because I am not smart in the morning.
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