Great revelation. I’m not a power thrower. I need the full-flight-anhyzer-to-pan-out-soft-landing shot to compete. But this shot lets me dominate at the local level.
It’s his fingertips slapping back against the palm of his hand as the disc leaves his hand. Caused by grip and form. Not at all necessary to throw far.
Are you planting in front or behind your back foot? My brother throws like that as well but he steps back which shifts his weight behind him, causing him to throw anhyzers. If you step in front of yourself it should be easier to throw hyzers and put more power on the disc because you can engage your hips more. Simon has a nice video on his stance somewhere on his channel.
Curious how the session with Ezra from earlier in the offseason worked out. If you kept working on that or not? If not, care to explain why? Very curious of the pro take on making formchanges vs oiling the groove (so to speak) and rather learn what you have instead of drilling something new.
There were times in this vid where you didn’t seem confident. But staying on top means always seeking to improve. You have many amazing qualities, one of which is your commentary and your ability to frase yourself. Another is explaining your struggles to help the rest of us with ours. Keep doing you and best of luck on tour!!!
when coaching anhyzer i tend to suggest keeping the wrist above the elbow and creating an upward plane with the forearm, this can go to crap if you adjust mid extension back to a hyzer angle but most of the time it helps encourage getting the spin moving towards the ground instead of flat and nose up which i often see with amatuers. nice to see you showing that mechanic with your form
The 3rd shot wasn't executed the same. You rounded, and pulled it inside the cone. Shots 1 and 2, you were reaching out and away. Shot 3, look at it. The follow-through wasn't as defined either. May just be a matter of focus and intent thru EVERY shot. Much harder for a seasoned pro after years and years of SNAPPING the disc so hard you can hear it in Ohio 😆 True fan here.
@@codylabrecque5446 If you grip the disc harder you'll produce more snap, though it can also wear down the skin quicker. Some of the fastest throwing pros like Thomas Gilbert produce relatively silent throws because they don't grip the disc as hard. Just something to think about. 🙂
what are the odds the golfer is repping uli merch love it
Great revelation. I’m not a power thrower. I need the full-flight-anhyzer-to-pan-out-soft-landing shot to compete. But this shot lets me dominate at the local level.
I really appreciate these kinds of videos. Keep it up and good luck out there this season!
This is definitely the shot I shank more than any other. Thank you Uli!
Always love the intro music!!
Good luck this season Uli! Can’t wait to watch you sling some discs
Snap! Great content, Uli 🙌
Thanks Paul!!
This is your year!!!
Uli looking fit!
Uli - please explain what is creating that "snapping 🫰🏼" sound on your release?? Thanks in advance and I really appreciate your tutorials 😇
It’s his fingertips slapping back against the palm of his hand as the disc leaves his hand. Caused by grip and form. Not at all necessary to throw far.
@@joshgroot thanks for your explanation. seems pretty loud and I don't recall hearing many pro's finish like that
I think you may be rounding in your anhyzer? The disc doesn’t seem to stay away from your body enough. Idk I’m jtm a pro though!
How far away was the cone? Looks like 40ft from your tee position
They all seemed to come out on a pretty low line.. was that on purpose?
It's funny, this is how I naturally throw, and all I have been doing for the last month is trying to throw hyzer! 😂
Are you planting in front or behind your back foot? My brother throws like that as well but he steps back which shifts his weight behind him, causing him to throw anhyzers. If you step in front of yourself it should be easier to throw hyzers and put more power on the disc because you can engage your hips more. Simon has a nice video on his stance somewhere on his channel.
Overstable disc on anhyzer or understable disc on slight hyzer?
Curious how the session with Ezra from earlier in the offseason worked out. If you kept working on that or not? If not, care to explain why? Very curious of the pro take on making formchanges vs oiling the groove (so to speak) and rather learn what you have instead of drilling something new.
There were times in this vid where you didn’t seem confident. But staying on top means always seeking to improve. You have many amazing qualities, one of which is your commentary and your ability to frase yourself. Another is explaining your struggles to help the rest of us with ours. Keep doing you and best of luck on tour!!!
Thanks I don’t play tournaments but I’ll try this
when coaching anhyzer i tend to suggest keeping the wrist above the elbow and creating an upward plane with the forearm, this can go to crap if you adjust mid extension back to a hyzer angle but most of the time it helps encourage getting the spin moving towards the ground instead of flat and nose up which i often see with amatuers. nice to see you showing that mechanic with your form
The shot that hates me the most....
The 3rd shot wasn't executed the same. You rounded, and pulled it inside the cone. Shots 1 and 2, you were reaching out and away. Shot 3, look at it. The follow-through wasn't as defined either. May just be a matter of focus and intent thru EVERY shot. Much harder for a seasoned pro after years and years of SNAPPING the disc so hard you can hear it in Ohio 😆
True fan here.
WouldabeenaPro Tip: pretend you are finishing the the last 1/4th, quarter, 90 degrees of a 360° throw.
when Uli said hyzer groundplay is less consistent than anhyzer 😮 mind blown, everything I thought I knew is a lie and it makes so much sense
Why would you be practicing in the middle of a golf Fairway? Can’t you find a field?
It’s actually our driving range for the Usdgc.
That snap on every throw though. 🥹 Sexy.
Honestly I'd really love to see Uli comeback and win a big one
For real, I don't understand the snap but I love it and want it
@@codylabrecque5446 If you grip the disc harder you'll produce more snap, though it can also wear down the skin quicker. Some of the fastest throwing pros like Thomas Gilbert produce relatively silent throws because they don't grip the disc as hard. Just something to think about. 🙂