An asymmetrical, biased, inexperienced recount
of the 2011 Croydon Cyclone as seen by BDGA newcomer David Ethier:
Friday:

Having just moved to the UK
twenty five days prior to this event, I sat in my newly-rented south London
flat, homesick, and wishing I could play in the Croydon Cyclone. I knew it was
coming up from checking the CDGC website, and had sent for my discs to be
shipped post haste in order to have a chance at playing in the tourney. But it
was Friday afternoon, the tourney was tomorrow, and I had yet to receive my
plastic.
"Why don't you just see if they have extra
discs for you to use," my wife asked, subtly encouraging me to get off my
pity pot.
Scoffing at the
mere suggestion, I spat, "Nobody's gonna loan me discs - it's a
tournament. They want to keep hold of what they've got."
Years of playing
with impolite, too-competitive golfers had conditioned me to expect that no one
was going to extend a welcoming hand to the new guy in town. The comment from
my wife reminded me of showing up about three minutes late for my first
Wednesday night doubles in a central North Carolina town; there were seven of
them - I would've evened out the field, but they simply responded, "Flip's
at 6:30, bro. Come on time next week." As you can imagine, I didn't return
the next week.
But hope springs
eternal; I flipped through the various tabs of the CDGC website, and found
Richard Wood's phone number.
Dude put his
phone number on the internet? Screw it - at least I can call.
I had seen that no
"day of" registrations would be taken for the tournament, and it was
already 1pm on Friday afternoon. Even if someone was willing to loan me
plastic, surely I was too late to register…I know how these TD's can get - all
persnickety about rules, being on time, players meetings. I braced myself for
what I expected to be one of the most awkward phone calls of my post-adolescent
life.
It was one of
those times where I was happy to be wrong - wrong about the phone call, the
discs, the registration - all of it. Richard insisted that there would be loads
of extra discs for me to use, that it wasn't too late to register, and that
everyone was down at the course right now if I wanted to come walk it.
I hadn't gotten
that far - hell, I had no idea how to get to Lloyd Park! I scrambled for pen
and paper as Richard rattled off a list of directions, bus routes, tram stops,
street names, etc. It was all I could do just to write it all down - I had no
idea what he was talking about (as it turns out, I've spent a lot of time in
this new country just nodding my head and smiling, acting like I know what
people are talking about). I took his directions to the computer, deciphered
them with the aid of Google, and got ready to head out the door. I was anxious
like a kid on the way to his first day of school. The bus couldn't have been
slower.
I got on the tram
without realizing that I should've "touched in" with my travel card beforehand.
I spent the next seven minutes terrified that I was going to be "found
out" before the Lloyd Park stop; the move to London had been a rough one
(we arrived in the middle of the riots with a hotel room in Peckham) - all I
needed was to get some sort of ticket when I was on my way to finally
get to play some disc golf. It was a genuine beginners mistake, so when I
got off, I didn't think about it again - I was too busy calling Richard and
walking across the practice fields towards hole 18. Richard greeted me with
handfuls of plastic and a big grin. Too excited to remember anyone's name, I
was introduced to everyone that had been at the course, setting up. Sure - it's
social convention to introduce yourself to everyone right off the bat, but I
estimate about a 5% name retention rate after that type of name-bombardment.
Then this strange thing happened: everyone sat around, enjoying each others'
company. I'd not seen anything like this the day before a tournament. I'm used
to showing up, seeing the one or two guys I know, hanging with them, and
watching as all the other guys posture. There's a lot of "all hat, no
cattle" where I come from - dudes with tons of gear, plastic, accessories,
and way too much attitude…and lack the most important ingredient -
skill. Of course, there are exceptions to the rule, but I think there's a
strong correlation between the amount of gear someone has and how big of an
a**hole he is.
So we just...hung
out. And I got my first dose of what the BDGA scene is all about: making
friends, having fun, and enjoying disc golf.
Not long after, John
Tweed and Phil Blount showed up. They were welcomed in such a fashion that I
assumed they were from Croydon, too. Nope. Does everyone that plays disc
golf on this island know each other? James Bates hooked up with Tweed,
Phil, and myself to walk the front nine. Playing a brand new course with seven
discs you've never thrown before in a country you've never been to before with
a group of people you've never met before is an experience I recommend to
anyone still reading this recap. We happened to run into Richard and Phil as
they were setting up the very last basket for the tournament - hole 7 (that
should've been a par 3 - let's be honest, that was a short 4. And don't
tell me that the wind was a factor, because I know you're just clawing for
excuses - that was a 3) - we got to see them break the weld on the basket.
Well, "got" to isn't really the word - more like "we suffered
with them." It was the end of the day and this seemed to be near the end
of their list of chores - the heartbreak was almost audible as we all tried to
figure out what could be done to make the basket stay still for the entire
weekend. They kidnapped James and went off to figure out what to do. Tweed,
Phil B, and I finished up through hole 9, and I was on my way home. Turns out,
I didn't "touch in" on the tram home, got caught, but played on the
stereotype that all Americans are dumb and got away without a ticket (but vowed
to myself never to risk it again). I'm finding that talking like a
redneck sometimes turns out in my favor over here.
Saturday:
6:30 came early,
but I refused to have a bad attitude - I was about to get to play in a proper
English Disc Golf tournament! I arrived bright eyed and bushy tailed to the
course for a warm-up round with Phil Blount and John Tweed only to find out
they had slept in past their alarms. Of course. So, off to the players meeting
I went. As I walked over the bridge, I could already hear the laughter coming
over the fence from the scout hut. I walked into the yard to find an atmosphere
analogous to that of a family reunion. My earlier inclination seemed to have
been right: everyone who plays disc golf on this island knows each other.
Taken aback and somewhat nervous that it was obvious I was new around here (if
everyone knows each other, then everyone must know that I know no one, right?),
I sat back and enjoyed watching everyone reunite and talk smack. The players
meeting was as unavoidably boring as every other players meeting has ever been.
Picking up a DGA disc somewhat made up for it.
I still hadn't
played the back 9 when we started round one (first excuse), but I had been
provided a bag by some Essex folk, who's names escape me at the moment
(referencing the fact that I am playing with borrowed plastic again,
excuse number two). I was partnered up with "Hippie" Dan Hawkins and
Charlie Mead. We three had a great round, un-rushed, with moments of brilliance
for each of us. Charlie ripped a stellar drive on hole 14 as a man was jogging
beside him. "That was straight, you should play real golf," the
jogger uttered as he passed. I bit my lip till it bled, frustrated, and
realized that we have some work to do here to raise the prestige of this sport.
Dan told us about growing up in Croydon and talked a bit about the history of
the course, and the playing fields that we passed through to get to Croydon's
"amen corner" of holes 6, 7, and 8. I ate about 137 Blackberries
during the round, astounded that there were so many and that nobody else was
picking them off the bushes.
Lunch was awesome.
I'm not used to lunch being provided at a tournament. It was cool to sit
around, eat a hoagie the size of a tree trunk, and have my first
"squash" drink.
In the second
round, I was grouped with Alie Findlay, Rich Hatton, and Jessie Denny. Everyone
showed up in good spirits and was excited for another round of disc golf.
Jessie claimed he was from America as well, but he's spent so much time over
here that his vowels are all messed up; he sounds like a linguistic mutt - it's
pretty interesting to hear him code-switch from British jargon to American
jargon in a moment's notice without even realizing it. The four of us play
pretty well, but get along better than we play. Rich had a pretty awesome round
save the no circle 8 he took on hole 9 (which, with the OB, is one of my
favorite holes on the course). Jesse, on a somewhat scary tee off hole 5,
taught me what the phrase "5p, 50p" meant - real cultural exchange.
Alie explained the Hyzer Cup to me, as the two others bragged about winning the
past two years. After we finished our round, Jessie drummed up a "one disc
challenge" between the two Brits and two Americans. I immediately became
obnoxious, forgot the decorum that comes with a tournament, and began hollering
obscenities left and right, surely messing up someone's final putt of the day.
In other words, I began confirming stereotypes. But we won those four holes!
That's gotta count for something! I ate another 146 or so blackberries.
The longest drive
contest was equal parts fun, satisfying, and hilarious. At first, I thought is
was about the worst idea to let everyone throw, split up by divisions,
and to have three separate categories of discs thrown. "This is
going to take two hours," I said to myself, reluctant to stay. But, and
this may sound cheesy, the positive energy of the group of people still hanging
around for the fun kept me there - this was a group of guys here for a good
time, not a bunch of blowhards trying to come in, make their score, then go
home. That was attractive to me, so I stayed. The longest drive competition
also has an element of youthful awe to it - everyone loves to watch a disc fly
- doesn't matter who threw it or that it was longer than someone else's throw,
and it was never more apparent than on Saturday night. It didn't matter whether
or not someone was throwing minis, putters, or drivers - the sounds the group
made were the same as you'd hear on a playground. The collective
"ooooh's" and "aaaah's" were symptomatic of tangible fun
being had on this small patch of grass, some 3,000 miles away from the last
place I saw a disc fly. It was the first time I felt like I was home again -
the first time I forgot myself, forgot that I sounded different, and that
everything around me was different. Just watching the plastic fly in that
predictable hyzer pattern allowed me a moment of respite from all the stress of
assimilating to this environment.
I didn't stay for
the BBQ, and am regretting it as I write this. I heard it was awesome.
Sunday:
The morning round
had me grouped with Rich O'Connell (who would later win the Union Jack disc bag
in the raffle) and Johnny Morris. We all commented that it was one of the most
pleasant, relaxed rounds of disc golf any of us had played. We were a group of
three, but took our time and never got held up by the group ahead of us. Some
of that could have been due to the fact that I had a hard time finding the
fairway all morning; I wound up with the classic Sunday morning blow up score.
Johnny and I both had found that the DGA Hurricane was going to maintain heavy
rotation in our bag - we each threw it several times during the round. Rich
made sure to tell me not to eat any Blackberries below the waist on account of
all the…dogs…having to "make water" out on the course. I appreciated
him looking out for me - another 127 Blackberries consumed before the round was
over. I was still astonished that no one else was even thinking about
eating them. Your loss.
Lunch was awesome
again. More massive tree trunk sandwiches served to a hungry group. This time,
however, we finished on hole three and got to be first in line. In keeping with
the spirit of trying new things, I went for the purple drank rather than the
yellow from the day before.
The rain started
the fourth and final round off a bit slippery. I was grouped with John Tweed,
Tom Lowes, and Steve Kornmuller (who would've thought that playing four rounds
in a BDGA tourney would have me grouped with two Americans?). The four of us
get off to a great start, cracking jokes and hitting birdies. I knew I was out
of the hunt for top spot, so I decided that I would be out to go big. In doing
so, I managed to do some maintenance work for the CDGC, trimming tree branches
and mowing some grass. Tom, on the other hand, played lights out. As
everyone knows, he hit the second of the weekend's aces. It was so cool to see
his reaction to hitting the hole in one - he was speechless, even breathless.
He had to sit down for a moment to regain his composure! How awesome is that? I
watched him tee off, went and grabbed a Blackberry, turned around to eat it and
saw the disc go in the basket. CHAIIIINS! Tweed had a good round, but
managed to get his Banshee deeper in the briars in between hole two and the
Tram tracks than I could've ever imagined. He came out of the mess looking like
he got in a fight with a pack of angry cats. Steve had a good round, getting to
"cheat" as he is ambidextrous - can you imagine having a choice to
throw with either your right or left hand? How enviable! We had as fun a finish
as we did a start, and headed back to hole 18 to watch the big boys chain out.
The awards
ceremony was fun. Phil Wood did a great job keeping everything moving along at
a good pace, and it was cool to see so many people get to pick up some plastic.
The shield Dell got for winning the Open division was hilariously big - he can
ride into Nationals brandishing that thing for an awesome intimidation effect;
I'd like to see him throw it.
I overheard
someone on my way to start the final round, "Yea, this tournament's been
great - I've been grouped with different people each round, and everything's
been really smooth." That about sums it up for me too, both literally and
thematically. The CDGC and BDGA are dominated by guys that are out to have fun,
make friends, and enjoy disc golf. That's a group I'm more than happy to be a
part of. Jessie Denny, in the middle of our round Saturday afternoon said,
"When I moved here, I met a lot of people, but it's the disc golfers that
really welcomed me and are my true friends today." Everyone involved put
on a fantastic tournament - no hitches, and everyone that took part in it was
classy, nice, and fun to be around.
I arrived at the
house cured of my homesickness and happy to be here all over again. I looked
forward to being part of the BDGA family, being someone who thinks it’s normal
to know everyone who plays disc golf on this island, and - most of all - being
around good people who are having fun and enjoying the game.
My thanks to
everyone for making the Croydon Cyclone such a fantastic tournament. See you at
the next tour event!




