6:54 is pretty wild. Since that's a flick, if he tries to catch it with his left near the back of the disc, the disc is going to immediately spin away from him and there's no way he's coming down with it (assuming he can only get is fingers on it), but catching it trailing edge in the right makes the disc spin back towards him, so even if he can only touch it, he has a great chance. That's smart as well as insancely athletic and quick to recognize.
@ethanbeachy65932 жыл бұрын
Also - and this is important in my opinion - he gets his are all the way back "out" (not across his body) by the time he lands, so he doesn't land on and potentially hurt his shoulder.
@darrensmith90352 жыл бұрын
Mannn that strike cut layout snag to inside flick assist was just nasty.
@jakekwalsh2 жыл бұрын
7 steps is all he had to get that speed and separation. Incredible
@charlieramirez92232 жыл бұрын
I despise how ultimate frisbee mf’s use the most complex lingo known to man
@darrensmith90352 жыл бұрын
@@charlieramirez9223 how could I simplify it and still be specific enough for people to know what I was referring to?
@kdriehuys2 жыл бұрын
@@charlieramirez9223 "Oh man I loved how that block mispositioned the QB for the sac and subsequent safety." All sports use their own language. Learn it don't hate it.
@erictaylor47522 жыл бұрын
This goes hard af
@solfeinberg4372 жыл бұрын
He really knows how to box out - he'd have to to get on the highlights with his height. I absolutely love how he positions himself between his defender and the disk - his speed makes that straightforward - then, what's so smart, is he hesitates slows down a lot and then resumes his speed to go get the disc. Meanwhile the defender has to slow up to not hit him and the defender's differential is not enough to overcome the gap Anders has created. I'm thinking I'm gonna go try and play some old man variation of this kind of play - zipping around everywhere. Hard cuts to shake defenders, attacking whichever side they're not committed to.
@solfeinberg4372 жыл бұрын
Anders is different, but his cutting reminds me a bit of kurt gibson - okay you want to defend that space, I'll take this space. Although with Gibson I feel like he's just seeing the opportunity, Jeungst seems to be steering his defender away from where he wants to go. He also remind me of Dylan Freechild. I think Dylan set his endzone strike cuts up from the handler position, but he was always very open in the endzone.
@solfeinberg4372 жыл бұрын
5:59 - Dross might've been able to get that, if he didn't care about Jeungst at all. In fact, Jeungst should definitely thank him immediately afterwards for holding up. Not sure what the rules are in this situation, but I'm thinking of the USA ultimate near the beginning I think they have something about not endangering your opponent. Interesting though if he could've grabbed the plastic first (and then concussed them both).
@benjaminwaltman68412 жыл бұрын
anders really established the space there, and per the rules drost has to avoid a dangerous play (which I'm pretty sure is still a call?), and I don't think there's any way he gets the that disc while being sure to avoid contact. made the right call in that position and that's what the rules are supposed to protect