Showing posts with label RnD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RnD. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Investigation: Founding Seattle Sockeye

What year was Seattle Sockeye founded?
Trying to find out a definitive answer was more complicated than swimming upstream.

Per Sockeye's Wikipedia page and Facebook: 1990.
Listed in Sockeye's Twitter bio: 1991.


Per Sockeye's team bio on USA Ultimate's Triple Crown Tour portal: 1993

According to Sockeye's website: 1994.


Data for this tweet was sourced from USA Ultimate National Championships site.

With conflicting data, the best answer might be: Seattle Sockeye was founded in the early 1990's.

UPDATE: Sockeye coach Mike Caldwell confirms the year was...1993.
[h/t Jeremy Ziskind]


Monday, December 17, 2018

Oddball AUDL Gift Ideas

With the gift season in mind, here are some unusual AUDL team products that still need to make it out of Research & Development:

Austin Sol Shade Tent

Minnesota Wind Chill Windbreaker

Raleigh Flyers Fly Swatter



Friday, August 29, 2014

Breaking: Indy AlleyCats are Not Cats

After the shocking news about Hello Kitty, the Indianapolis AlleyCats revealed they, too, are not cats. This announcement by the AUDL team has confused Indy fans who have enjoyed the teams's feline puns ("claw our way to the Championships") and the past whisker promotion.

From the Indianapolis statement: "AlleyCats are not cats. They are a friend. But they are not cats. They are never depicted on all fours."

Experts encourage fans of the Indy AlleyCats to seek support through social media channels to express themselves.

[spoof]

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Briny Foam Roller

Imagine bringing a foam roller AND pickles/juice to your next Ultimate game as ONE item. After months of testing prototypes, I invented a foam roller with a built-in pickle jar!
The "PICK & ROLL"TM
  • Foam roller, a cylindrical piece of extruded hard-celled foam, helps with localized self-massage increasing blood-flow within the muscle.
  • Pickle juice, which is high in sodium helps the body retain fluids, and helps to eliminate cramping. The average pickle spear contains nearly twice the amount of sodium than a sports drink.
No longer will you have to lug around 1 foam roller AND 1 jar of pickles! Just grab the PICK & ROLL. By combining these two important products for athletes, this all-in-one hybrid is going to revolutionize Ultimate sidelines and athletic recovery in the 21st century!

Pick & Roll prototype

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Best of the Ultimate Beasts

Humans sure are doing a superb job of playing Ultimate. But, which animals (can you imagine?) would excel at Ultimate?  Whether planning for the future inter-species Ultimate game, or applying it as a metaphor for player recruitment, use your human brain to dream up your starting seven species.

Jimmy Leppert of Skyd recently provided insight on his starting 7 non-humans.

I compiled visuals based on answers by Leppert & Pranksters (below):
Leppert's starting 7: receivers = dolphin, cheetah; defense = dog, bluefin tuna;
handlers = orangutan, bear; captain = lion.

Middlebury Pranksters' starting 7: golden eagle, bluefin tuna, blue whale, giraffe, black mamba, cheetah, boa constrictor

My starting 7: receivers = dog (border collie), giraffe; defense = octopus, falcon; handlers = chimpanzee, kangaroo; captain = tiger.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

How To: Be an Ultimate Team Fan

The increased exposure of the sport of ultimate is great for existing ulti fans, as well as new ones. Besides the (semi-) pro teams, most teams are still self-supporting.

Here's how you - as an Ultimate fan - can support your favorite ultimate team(s).

Stay Connected. Follow via all the social media outlets as a Facebook friend, twitter follower, YouTube subscriber, etc.

Sign-up for their newsletter. If offered, this communication may yield some great "insider" information, and best of all, it's sent directly to your inbox.

Join the team's "fan club." These are great (usually unofficial) groups to watch a game with since they're already engaged to the team. If your team doesn't have one, wait for one to form or start one yourself. [Examples: DC's Breeze NUTZ, San Francisco Pilot Fish].

Buy team merchandise. You could snag an official jersey, disc &/or other team logo swag. A portion of sales may go back to the team; plus you become a walking billboard for your team while showing team pride. Check your team's website for an online store/merchandise link. [Examples: Bay Area's Nightlock, Boston Ironside, Seattle Sockeye].

Donate. Every dollar helps. Consider donating online whether it be for general support, for a team's special event (e.g. international tournament) or part of a crowd-funding project. Check your team's website for more information. [Examples: SF Fury, Atlanta Ozone]

Support team sponsors. Take note of any team's sponsorship(s) and patronize their business. While there, tell them you learned of them through this ultimate connection.

Attend games. Cheer your team on at their games If there are ticket sales, buy a ticket to watch your team in action; a portion of sales typically/should go back to the team, or off-set any field costs.

Buy team merchandise at the game. Avoid any shipping fees and grab some team swag. Again, a portion of sales may go back to the team.

Buy concessions at the game. Forking over some extra bills for over-priced drinks or food is helpful. Depending on the setup, a portion of sales may go back to the team.

Be a fan during the game. Learn some tips via this Guide & other recommendations.

Be a fan after the game. Ultimate players are pretty social folks, so congratulate your team's players after the game. Consider asking for an autograph, even!

Spread the word. Post your experience(s) on social media by mentioning your team.

Volunteer. Ultimate teams have lots of moving parts, so you can assist by being their statistician, store manager, web guru, team tweeter, or some other non-game-day role. Being a volunteer aids them so they can focus on competing.

Monday, July 01, 2013

Pro Ultimate League article [NPR]

New Pro League Tosses Its Disc Into The Frisbee Game
by Tyler Greenwalt [6.24.13 . NPR]

You know that flying disc you threw around in college or use to play fetch with your dog? Well, now people are being paid to throw that same disc professionally. They aren't paid much, around $25 a game, but all of the expenses — travel, lodging, uniforms and insurance — are covered by Major League Ultimate.
...
On Sunday, the eight-team league concluded its first 10-week season in the nation's capital. Roaring heat melded with roaring fans as players ran, dove and spun the disc through the air during the final regular season game between the New York Rumble and the Washington DC Current.

A Sport On The Rise
The league, founded last year by seven members of the Ultimate Frisbee community, decided to build upon the league they left in 2012 and make the sport more spectator-friendly. That meant changing the rules a little by including referees, adding a time limit and changing "do-overs" into turnovers.

Jeff Snader, president of the new professional league, suggested forming the group in August 2012 to friend and colleague Nic Darling. Darling, who is now the league's vice president, thought the first game wouldn't be played until 2015. But Snader, sensing a strong surge in the sport, wanted to get going more quickly.

Nine months later, Major League Ultimate, the second professional Ultimate Frisbee league in the United States, played its first games. "We're doing something most people say is impossible," Snader says. "It's even, to some people's minds, crazier than lingerie football or something."

Snader thinks Ultimate Frisbee is right on the brink of national stardom. On May 31, the International Olympic Committee officially recognized the World Flying Disc Federation, the international governing body of all flying disc sports, and Ultimate Frisbee as a sport. ESPN has also featured highlights on SportsCenter's Top 10 Plays and SportsNation multiple times over the past few weeks.

"The reason I think Frisbee has a chance is because of how extreme it is," Snader says. "People hear Frisbee and think 'no way is that professional.' And then they see it and they're like, 'Wow. ... How have I been missing this?' "

...
But with these rule changes, Major League Ultimate looks to help fans understand the game better and quicken the pace of the game. The rule changes also give the players the opportunity to concentrate on playing.

"We wanted to free them up to do what they do best, which is play the sport," Darling says "and to give them the opportunity to do that without having to worry about making calls or arguing about calls or being accused of making bad calls."

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Ultimate Frisbee article [Washington Post]

A friend texted me "Reading abt the Current in the Post Sports Section" this past weekend. Published in the printed newspaper (circulation of 838,000), the article is a good 'MLU 101' and game promo.

However, the article did not cover the other DC pro ultimate team (Breeze), nor the AUDL. Did the author ignore covering the AUDL/Breeze because he writes for the MLU/Current?
Game recap. WaPo story.

Ultimate frisbee looks to grow, so long as it can maintain its roots [WaPo 6.22.13]
By Bryan Flaherty

..."Playing before crowds of over a thousand has been unreal,” said Daniel Kantor, DC’s co-captain. "When I first got my jersey and got on the team bus for a road game, it made me think, 'Yeah, this is happening. I'm playing professional ultimate.'"

"Professional" is true in a minimal sense. MLU Commissioner Jeff Snader said players make $25 per game with incentives that will push some players' season salaries over $1,000. Crowds at the modest stadiums the league rents from high schools and municipalities have been small, but Snader said fans who give the sport a look tend to return.

"Things can change in an instant," said Tom Crawford, chief executive of USA Ultimate. "At any moment, players can shift from offense to defense."

What traditionally has not been part of such transitions is the presence of a referee. The sport's guiding principle — referred to as "spirit of the game" — calls for players to make their own officiating decisions and settle disputes on their own.

But MLU made a decision to move away from the self-officiating principle, instituting referees instead in one of several key rules changes aimed at making the game more accessible to regular sports fans, including adding time-regulated quarters instead of playing to a point total and expanding the size of the playing field.

"We wanted to simplify things on the field for the players and the fans," said Snader. "Referees prevent lengthy on-field discussions between players and move the game along."

According to Crawford, such rules changes mean the MLU is playing a sport that isn't, by the strictest definition, ultimate.
...

Monday, June 10, 2013

The State of Ultimate Frisbee

Eli, a friend of Sludge, penned a great article on the current perspective of Ultimate.

A World of Flying Discs In Pursuit of Ultimate [The Classical]

...Ultimate is, fundamentally and in its actual bylaws, a pickup sport. In a pickup game -- hoops, soccer, whatever -- you don't hack the shit out of people. You don’t not-foul people, either, but there's a certain self-governing thing at work, there. You play to the game, what the market will bear. Are people fouling and not calling it? Are they calling picks? Are they pushing off and bumping on the mark? You go with it, whatever the case may be. You have to know the rules, but you also know that everyone in the game has agreed to play by them. Thou Shalt Not Be A Dick is the prime directive, the one supreme commandment. It works, but it works both because everyone is implicitly obeying the same rule, and because it's just a pickup game.
...
The word amateur's Latin root, "amo," means love. That seems worth mentioning. But it seems most mentioning because of ultimate's slow but unmistakable transition into something governed by a force other than love. USAUltimate, the sport’s governing body in the United States, just inked a long term deal with ESPN to air college games -- at least 23 games from the championship series will run this spring, with undisclosed terms for the future. Viewers drive ad dollars, and ad dollars will drive sponsorships. The same could be true with the Triple Crown series for club level teams in the fall.
...
The number one mistake the magazine cites are logos "designed by an amateur." I'm a graphic designer, and I recently reviewed all 20 of the logos for the American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) and Major League Ultimate (MLU) for a site called Sludge Ultimate.

What I found was that not just the logos, but the overall branding was amateurish in 19 of the 22 teams. In addition to that the forward face of these teams and the leagues, and their websites, were still, mere days from the start of official competition, littered with broken links; a goodly number were technically "under construction", and "coming soon." ...

Ultimate is not a sport unlike any other. It is, in fact, a sport a lot like other sports; that's the appeal. We run, we leap, we chase, we defend, we score, we strategize, we feel the wear and tear on body and on soul, and become familiar with the joy that comes with a good play, and the downer that comes from an opportunity lost. Ultimate is many things to many of us, and will remain so in its amateur and professional incarnations. What Ultimate is not is the perfect sport, or the ideal sport, or the sport to save all sports; it doesn't serve ourselves or the game we love to tout it as, well, the ultimate sport. But it works, and has worked for years. Whether it can be more than what it is, and has been, is a question without an answer just yet.
##

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

ESPN says it's Covering Ultimate

ESPN Comes Out: Openly Covering Ultimate

As ESPN went about its normal daily operations of covering the biggest sports headlines, it, too, was finalizing plans for an announcement that would send shock waves across the world of sports. That official internet video announcement came on Tuesday, with a YouTube clip posted by USA Ultimate:

The original draft announcement began with three statements: "We're a 34-year-old global media network. We're owned by Disney. And we're covering Ultimate." Instead, the announcement led with a casual greeting: "What's up, Ultimate fans?"

With that, ESPN became the first active major sports network in 2013 to come out as covering more than just college Ultimate — a designation that is certain to elevate this already hugely popular cable network known primarily for its signature telecast, SportsCenter. Coverage will not just be the College Championships, like CBS Sports Network, but ESPN will also feature the U.S. Open Championships and the National [Club] Championships.

The initial wave of public reaction to ESPN's revelation was overwhelmingly supportive. Skyd Magazine, Full Field Hammer and Ultiworld tweeted ESPN's welcome message, and USAUltimate's video has gained nearly 30,000 views. Windy City Wildfire star Brodie Smith and a handful of Ultimate players were among others who issued public kudos to ESPN. Tuesday's official announcement from ESPN officially confirms previous "rumors".
##
[spoof]

Monday, March 25, 2013

Surveying Ultimate as a Sport


Needed: Your input about Ultimate as a sport.

Background: Ultimate is NOT listed in ESPN's published rankings for 60 sports.

Survey's Purpose: Where does Ultimate rank within ESPN's "Top Sports"?


Results: Survey results & analysis will be published online.

Thanks in advance for participating!

[This survey is a SLUDGE Ultimate project in collaboration with Ultiworld.] Learn more

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Ultimate as an ESPN Sport

Back in August 2012, I read a tweet that prompted me to quantify Ultimate as sport.

For all the ways to describe Ultimate (soccer-esque, basketball-ish, tennis-like, quasi-football, with a flying disc), this ESPN "Ultimate Degree of Difficulty Grid" helped me break down the Ultimate sport. Again, Ultimate is *NOT* on the ESPN list.

After that tweet, I thought about how to conduct a similar evaluation of Ultimate as a sport. I have lots of ideas, so my first step was to see if my concept was even feasible. I contacted Ultiworld after meeting him in the fall, and Charlie validated my idea. I also asked UltiCards & they excitedly responded with a blog post about it.

ESPN's approach was they identified 10 categories, or skills, that go into athleticism, and then asked their 8 panelists to assign a number from 1 to 10 to the demands each sport makes of each of those 10 skills. The Top-10 ESPN Sports are: (1) Boxing, (2) Ice Hockey, (3) Football, (4) Basketball, (5) Wrestling, (6) Martial Arts, (7) Tennis, (8) Gymnastics, (9) Baseball/Softball, (10) Soccer.

I then developed a survey to capture the 10 areas for sport evaluation, plus some demographic data. The survey launched with the help of a lovely coder who allowed many 'just-1-more-edit' updates.

Finally in March 2013, I surveyed a range of Subject Matter Experts (SME) within the Ultimate field (i.e., trainers, teams, players, pro leagues, instructors, media, etc.) asking their objective opinion. Immediately after asking the SMEs, you may have noticed some comments [Skyd, Ultimate Rob, ultimateproblems] about this very query -- Where would/should Ultimate rank in the ESPN Sports list?

Since then, interestingly, USA Ultimate announced their deal with ESPN. Now that the SMEs have had their say, the survey will soon be is open for YOU to weigh in.

Look for the survey to be opened very soon now. Survey results about Ultimate is expected to be shared here & on Ultiworld in the near future.


Giving credit due where credit is deserved...thanks again to Jeff Snader for influencing this effort.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

MLU vs Club Roster: Vancouver

With Major League Ultimate's season being scheduled before the Club Ultimate season, it makes sense that teams would draw from Club-level players. Over two-thirds of the Nighthawks' roster are Furious George players, with the remainder as former Furious teammates, as well as from Team Fisher Price & UBC (Knapp).

Vancouver Nighthawks' 2013 roster was compared to the Furious' 2012 roster. Out of the 25-person MLU roster, 17 (68%) are Furious George players. Thanks to Ryan Thompson who helped identify the non-Furious players, as well as the ex-Furious players rostered on Ultimate Canada 2012 teams.

Furious George club players on the 2013 Nighthawks Roster
Related Rosters: DC . Seattle. Boston. San Fran.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

MLU vs Club Roster: San Francisco

With Major League Ultimate's season being scheduled before the Club Ultimate season, it makes sense that teams would draw from Club-level players. The majority of the Dogfish roster are Revolver players, with the remainder from Bay Area club teams (Boost Mobile, Polar Bears, Blackbird, GrasSFace & Mischief).

San Francisco Dogfish 2013 roster was compared to the Revolver 2012 roster. Out of the 23-person MLU roster, 14 (61%) are Revolver players. Based on published 2012 rosters, there are also 9 (39%) Dogfish players from other Bay Area club teams - Boost Mobile (5); Polar Bears, Blackbird, GrasSFace & Mischief (each mixed club team with 1).

Revolver and SF-based club players on the 2013 Dogfish Roster
Related Rosters: DC . Seattle. Boston. Vancouver.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Ultimate Disc Anatomy

The crucial piece of sports equipment for the game of Ultimate is, simply, an engineering marvel. Let's review the individual parts that make up a disc's structure.


Lip or Rim: The outside wall of the disc.

Flight Plate: The flat surface on the top of the disc. The disc design (hot stamp) is placed on the flight plate.

Lines of Headrick: The flight rings named after Ed Headrick, the perfecter of the flying disc. Adding these raised ridges helped stablize disc flight. When Wham-O's patent for the flight rings expired, Discraft added them to the Ultra-Star and became the go-to Ultimate disc.

Line of Shelton: The mold line that runs around the lip of the disc. Named after Jay Shelton, a professor of physics and one of the first people to study the flight characteristics of a disc. Not to mention, a world distance record holder, plus a champion disc golfer & an individual Frisbee world champion.

Navel: The center of the disc.There is usually a small, subtle spot leftover from the manufacturing process.

Script Band: Acts like a big flight ring with an imprint of the disc name and model.

Slope of Morrison: Named after Fred Morrison, the inventor of the Frisbee. This is the bent slope from the flight plate to the lip/rim. It was a major improvement from pie tins and popcorn lids and kept the disc from turning on its side on every throw.

[SOURCES: Frisbee: A Practitioner's Manual and Definitive Treatise (1975) & Parts of a Disc (Ozark Ultimate).]


The parts of the disc. [via Craig Stephen SOURCE]

Thursday, March 07, 2013

MLU vs Club Roster: Boston

With Major League Ultimate's season being scheduled before the Club Ultimate season, it makes sense that teams would draw from Club-level players. Over half of Boston's roster are Ironside players, while the other half are mostly from mixed club teams (The Ghosts, Slow White, Wildcard,7 Figures & Darkwing).

Boston Whitecaps 2013 roster was compared to Boston Ironside's 2012 roster. Out of the 25-person MLU roster, 13 (52%) are Ironside players. Based on published rosters, there are also 10 (40%) Whitecaps' players from mixed club teams - The Ghosts (4), Slow White (3), Wildcard (1) & 7 Figures (1), Darkwing (1).

Ironside & mixed club players on the 2013 Whitecaps' Roster
Related Rosters: DC . Seattle. Vancouver. San Fran.

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

MLU vs Club Roster: Seattle

With Major League Ultimate's season being scheduled before the Club Ultimate season, it makes sense that teams would draw from Club-level players. Over half of Seattle's roster is Sockeye players.

Seattle Rainmakers 2013 roster was compared to Seattle Sockeye's 2012 roster. Out of the 26-person MLU roster, 14 are Sockeye players (54%).

Sockeye players on the Rainmakers' 2013 Roster
Related Rosters: DC. Boston. San Fran. Vancouver.

MLU vs Club Roster: DC

With Major League Ultimate's season being scheduled before the Club Ultimate season, it makes sense that teams would draw from Club-level players. DC's roster is nearly two-thirds Truck Stop players.

Washington DC's Current 2013 roster was compared to DC's Truck Stop 2012 roster. Out of the 23-person MLU roster, 15 are Truck Stop players (65%).

2012 TruckStop players on the 2013 DC Current Roster
Related Rosters: Seattle. Boston. San Fran. Vancouver.

Tuesday, March 05, 2013

AUDL Retention Rate

Knowing that small businesses have a high rate of failure made me take another look at what has occurred with the American Ultimate Disc League. The AUDL started their 2012 season with 8 teams -- 4 teams in the Western Division & 4 in the Eastern Division.


After their first season, AUDL retained only 50% of teams (4); two (2) of which moved from their original locations [Revolution from Louisville/Lexington to Cincinnati; Dragons (née Hunters) from Buffalo to Rochester]. The other 4 teams [Cranes, Constitution, Rampage & Spinners] are no longer in the league.

Thankfully for the AUDL, the planned expansion was executed; otherwise, the AUDL would be the size of one division in a first-year pro Ultimate league.
CHART: Status of the Original 8 AUDL Teams

Monday, March 04, 2013

Disc Design Homage

Were "spinners" a design inspiration emblazoned on the MLU's official disc??
MLU Innova disc (left) and Spinner hubcap (right)
The Philadelphia Spinners team was the founding Major League Ultimate team. And, the designs do look very similar. So, perhaps this dark red hot-stamp design is a subtle homage to the MLU creators.