Thank you for the video! I've been thinking about really learning the mechanics behind rollers lately, so this came out at the perfect time. I love your straight forward style of teaching! Keep up the good work, sir!
Thanks for your in depth explanations of the roller! I like being able to break things down and look at it in a more simplistic fashion then build on that. I feel you teach in that manner very well.
Excellent timing! Ive started getting snap finally, not every time, but im getting there. Ive always been scared of rollers due to lack of experience throwing them and no knowledge of them
There are great teachers, and there are those with great knowledge, and very few times in the universe do the two intersect. Two birds one stone, two gifts, one great blessing. Or rather to have understanding is one thing, but being able to express what you understand so people can understand is a complete gift. The gifted ones give gifts. Dude you got that. Peace
Have you done your forehand roller video you mentioned yet, as i cant seem to find it. Want to know about the differences you spoke of. Thanks for all your video, fantastic stuff!
yeah nah, couldn't see anything you launched, but certainly got the jist of the lesson, coach! I'm a left-handed aussie though, so it's all upside down and backwards for me.. I'm also in one of the windiest cities in the world. (Perth) You have to learn to deal with the wind on the course, or you get destroyed. we sail-roll.... I hope you enjoyed Queensland, Scott!
I have found that with a direct tailwind, you can get max distance and the wind keeps the disc going forward. If it tries to deviate left or right, the tailwind is there to push it back to straight.
I watched this on a hi def TV and couldn't see where the discs went they disappeared the instant they were thrown. And I've got great eye sight.. maybe use two cameras
Came here to say this. Having a second camera (& 3rd on a drone?) would make this a lot clearer for the viewer. Otherwise, excellent as usual, kind sir!
The blue sky kills seeing the flight, especially with the blueish Assassin. The Lots color you could almost see the flight. If you want to see the roller roll, you must first be able to track it's entire flight. Blue Sky backgrounds hinder tracking. The best seeing direction to throw was right against those taller trees, not towards the blue sky. Best disc tracking event this year, Overcast Portland on the tall elmed golf course. (Glendoveer R3) I'm sure your direction was based on wind and distance concerns, not one camera optics.
Scott, would it be a wise decision to invest in your program as well as a mobility program specifically for disc golf? May sound like a dumb question but just curious!!
Sometimes the ground I roll on is shielded by wind. Sometimes my overstable rollers, at the correct wind angle, will just stay up in the "sail" position for way longer than expected. But a backhand is more likely to be affected by wind than a forehand flick that stays down. Just some personal experiences.
Yes, he meant ‘small margin of error’ OR ‘large margin FOR error.’ In the context, I could figure out what he meant. Scott has so many of these free videos that are awesome I do not sweat it. This was a one take video.
Thank you for the video! I've been thinking about really learning the mechanics behind rollers lately, so this came out at the perfect time. I love your straight forward style of teaching! Keep up the good work, sir!
You’re definitely the best disc golf teacher in the world! Thank you for the wisdom my friend 🙏
Thanks for your in depth explanations of the roller! I like being able to break things down and look at it in a more simplistic fashion then build on that. I feel you teach in that manner very well.
Thank you for this Scott!!! So excited to continue working on this with your tips
Excellent timing! Ive started getting snap finally, not every time, but im getting there.
Ive always been scared of rollers due to lack of experience throwing them and no knowledge of them
Great video, brother. Gratitude.
There are great teachers, and there are those with great knowledge, and very few times in the universe do the two intersect. Two birds one stone, two gifts, one great blessing. Or rather to have understanding is one thing, but being able to express what you understand so people can understand is a complete gift. The gifted ones give gifts. Dude you got that. Peace
Good stuff Scott! Thanks.
Have you done your forehand roller video you mentioned yet, as i cant seem to find it. Want to know about the differences you spoke of. Thanks for all your video, fantastic stuff!
Gateway has some severely underrated discs. The Blade, Mystic, and Wizard are my go tos.
yeah nah, couldn't see anything you launched, but certainly got the jist of the lesson, coach! I'm a left-handed aussie though, so it's all upside down and backwards for me.. I'm also in one of the windiest cities in the world. (Perth) You have to learn to deal with the wind on the course, or you get destroyed. we sail-roll.... I hope you enjoyed Queensland, Scott!
Yep, 11:30 never saw it.
I have found that with a direct tailwind, you can get max distance and the wind keeps the disc going forward. If it tries to deviate left or right, the tailwind is there to push it back to straight.
I need this but with the low quality video, I can't see your discs once they leaves you hand, but I can use my imagination.
I have it on 4k on a 42 inch tv and still lose the disc half way of the flight.
I'm looking forward to your sidearm roller video that you spoke of here someday to complete the roller duo ;) #suggestions
It's a trio of rollers! Check out th-cam.com/video/aP4ilSSApkk/w-d-xo.html
I watched this on a hi def TV and couldn't see where the discs went they disappeared the instant they were thrown. And I've got great eye sight.. maybe use two cameras
Came here to say this. Having a second camera (& 3rd on a drone?) would make this a lot clearer for the viewer. Otherwise, excellent as usual, kind sir!
So, about that forehand rollers video - where do I find it? :D
I recognise that oval! Nice to meet you yesterday.
The blue sky kills seeing the flight, especially with the blueish Assassin. The Lots color you could almost see the flight. If you want to see the roller roll, you must first be able to track it's entire flight. Blue Sky backgrounds hinder tracking. The best seeing direction to throw was right against those taller trees, not towards the blue sky. Best disc tracking event this year, Overcast Portland on the tall elmed golf course. (Glendoveer R3) I'm sure your direction was based on wind and distance concerns, not one camera optics.
Scott, would it be a wise decision to invest in your program as well as a mobility program specifically for disc golf? May sound like a dumb question but just curious!!
Contact me directly so we can talk about this.
Sometimes the ground I roll on is shielded by wind. Sometimes my overstable rollers, at the correct wind angle, will just stay up in the "sail" position for way longer than expected. But a backhand is more likely to be affected by wind than a forehand flick that stays down. Just some personal experiences.
I once did a roller that went for two weeks!
Thought that was Simon in the thumbnail
Scott is mortal? who knew?
"Margin of error" does not mean what you think it does.
Yes, he meant ‘small margin of error’ OR ‘large margin FOR error.’ In the context, I could figure out what he meant. Scott has so many of these free videos that are awesome I do not sweat it. This was a one take video.
Can we at least agree to call the cut roller a trick shot?