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Outdoor Games

Ultimate Frisbee Is Hot In NC

Christian Schwoerke, one of the deans of the sport of ultimate disc in North Carolina, describes the game as two seven-person teams on a field “similar in size to a football field with as much running as soccer. The aim of each team is to score a goal in the opposite end zone by catching a pass from a teammate.”

Once he’s given potential players that description, complete with the implication that there’s a lot of running involved, Schwoerke pauses “to see if there’s a sign of further interest” says the Durham-based graphic designer and promotional writer.

Fortunately, there has been plenty of interest in North Carolina over the years for ultimate, or ultimate Frisbee, as it is also known. All the metro areas of the state sponsor leagues, casual pickup play, and many have long-standing mens, womens, and coed, or mixed, teams. North Carolina State’s men won the collegiate national championship in 1993 and 1998. And the Triangle’s most prominent mens and womens teams, Ring of Fire and Backhoe, respectively, are national powers.

Devised in the late 1960s by high school students in New Jersey, the game has grown with national and international organizations that sponsor competitions for high school, college, and adult men and women. In this decade, it has become one of the fastest growing sports in the U.S. with well over 100,000 players.

At its core, ultimate is a competition that eschews some typical trappings of organized sports, stressing instead a socializing esprit de corps among players. That’s reflected in the fact there are no referees in ultimate – players call their own fouls and other violations. While this can result in lengthy in-game “discussions” regarding violations – most players still prefer that to a referee.

The overriding credo of ultimate is known as the Spirit of the Game, which stresses sportsmanship, fair play, and respect between players. Players often commend each others “good spirit” for making or agreeing with difficult calls that don’t benefit their team. Thanks to this atmosphere it is not surprising that ultimate players are as much social group as sports league.

“When I moved to Charlotte, it was through ultimate that I met a lot of great people,” says Lori Granath, a middle school math teacher. “It is one of the few sports that you can play and become good at without having played as a kid up through college.”

Charlotte’s Molly Hughes, an accountant, lists “competition, exercise, and the great people involved” as the reasons she plays. Likewise, Schwoerke savors “the positive vibe of the ultimate groups that I run into wherever I travel.”

Where to Look for Info


Ultimate Trivia:

By Des Keller

added: December 23, 2008
updated: December 26, 2008

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