Blog Category: Equipment

In the ever-evolving world of disc golf, there’s a game-changing piece of technology that’s making waves and turning heads. If you’re passionate about enhancing your disc golf performance or coaching aspiring players, the TechDisc is a must-have addition to your toolkit. Let’s delve into what makes this innovative device a game-changer for disc golf enthusiasts.

What is TechDisc?

TechDisc is a groundbreaking device designed to revolutionize the way you approach disc golf. It’s much more than an accessory – it’s your gateway to unlocking the hidden potential of your throws. This cutting-edge technology provides real-time flight data, allowing you to gain immediate insights into various aspects of your disc’s flight.

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If you’re a disc golfer, then chances are you’ve considered dyeing your discs at some point. After all, who doesn’t love a custom-colored disc? Dyeing discs is a great way to show off your personality and style on the course. Plus, it can really come in handy if you lose a disc in tall grass or in water—a brightly-colored disc is much easier to spot than a white one!

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While Paige Pierce and Disraft have not officially launched a video, and Discraft has not completely updated her page, we can have a pretty good idea about her bag in 2021. The following discs have been compiled from several videos on YouTube. If you haven’t seen her Disc Golfing on the Big Island video, she has great flight videos of some of her discs.

Be sure to check out her website and her Patreon for all her latest news and updates.

Distance Drivers

Zeus (ESP Swirl) 12 | 5 | -1 | 3 (1.9)
Force (Z Swirl) 12 | 5 | 0 | 3 (2.0)
Nuke (ESP Swirl) 13 | 5 -1 3 (1.6)

Fairway Drivers

Avenger SS (Z) 10 | 5 | -3 | 1 (0.5)
Stalker (ESP & Z) 7 | 5 | -1 | 2 (1.1)
Raptor (ESP Swirl) 9 | 4 | 0 | 3 (2.1)

Mid Range Drivers

Buzzz (Z & Page Pierce Tour Series) 5 | 4 | -1 | 1 (0.5)
Zone (ESP) 4 | 3 | 0 | 3 (2.0)
Sol (Z) 4 | 5 | -3 | 0 (-0.5)

Putt & Approach

Banger-GT (Pro D) 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 (1.0)
Fierce (Special Blend) 3 | 4 | -2 | 0 (0.0)

Calvin Heimburg is sponsored by Innova. Here’s a look at what he’s bagging in 2021!

Distance Drivers

Destroyer (Star) 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Destroyer (Tour Series) 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Destroyer (Halo) 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Destroyer (Halo Tour Series) 12 | 5 | -1 | 3

Fairway Drivers

Teebird (Champion) 7 | 5 | 0 | 2
Eagle (Champion) 7 | 4 | -1 | 3
Firebird (Star) 9 | 3 | 0 | 4
Draco (Quantum) 9 | 3 | 0 | 4

Midrange Drivers

Roc (DX) 4 | 4 | 0 | 3
Roc3 (Champion) 5 | 4 | 0 | 3
Roc3 (Luster) 5 | 4 | 0 | 3
Caiman (Star) 5.5 | 2 | 0 | 4

Putt & Approach

Aviar Driver (KC Pro) 2 | 3 | 0 2
AviarX3 (DX) 3 | 2 | 0 | 3
Rhyno (Champion) 2 | 1 | 0 | 3

Updated: May 24th, 2021

Ricky Wysocki is off to a hot start in 2021! Here is  officially launched a new ‘In the Bag’ video.

Ricky mentions that he tried to keep it simple by carrying a limited molds in his Zuca cart. He also likes to throw a lot of Destroyers and a lot of Pigs!

Distance Drivers

Metal Flake Destroyer 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Star Destroyer 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Glow Champion Destroyer 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Huk Lab Destroyer 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Halo Destroyer 12 | 5 | -1 | 3
Star Max 11 | 3 | 0 | 5
Champion Max 11 | 3 | 0 | 5
Champion Monster 11 | 3 | 0 | 5
Star Wraith 11 | 5 -1 | 3

Fairway Drivers

Metal Flake Firebird 9 | 3 | 0 | 4
Champion Firebird 9 | 3 | 0 | 4
Star Firebird 9 | 3 | 0 | 4
Champion TeeBird 7 | 5 | 0 | 2
Champion TeeBird 3 8 | 4 | 0 | 2

Midrange Drivers

KC Pro Roc 4 | 4 | 0 | 3
Star Roc 4 | 4 | 0 | 3

Putt & Approach

DX Classic Aviar 2 | 3 | 0 | 0
KC Pro Aviar 2 | 3 | 0 | 2
Aviar Driver 2 | 3 | 0 | 2
Pro Pig (Signature Disc) 3 | 1 | 0 | 3
Star Aviarx3 3 | 2 | 0 | 2

2021 In The Bag (Innova):

2020 In the Cart (Gatekeeper Media):

 

Congrats to James Conrad as he moves to MVP in 2021! James was with Innova for a long time and had his staples molds there. His new bag will no doubt be a work in progress as he moves from Innova to MVP discs. So far in early 2021, his disc selection is fairly top heavy with distance drivers. Here’s how the selection looks so far:

Distance Drivers

Mayhem (Neutron) 13 | 5 | -1.5 | 2
Nitro (Neutron) 13 | 4 | .5 | 3
Photon (Fusion) 11| 5 | -1 | 2
Tesla (Neutron) 9 | 5 | -1 | 2
Fireball (Neutron) 9 | 3.5 | 0 | 3.5

Fairway Drivers

Relay (Cosmic Neutron) 6 | 5 | -2 | 1
Volt (Neutron) 8 | 5 | -.5 | 2

Midrange Drivers

Reactor (Cosmic Neutron) 5 | 5 | -.5 | 1.5

Putt & Approach

Envy (Electron) 3 | 3 | 0 | 2
Ion (Electron) 2.5 | 3 | 0 | 1.5

Disc Golf Bag

Voyager V2 Bag

Here’s a video from MVP breaking em down:

Disc golf is great way to get out in nature, get your steps in and heart up, meet new people, and the sport is growing like crazy! I’m constantly running into new players every time I hit the course, from all walks of life. If you’re just starting out and want to improve your game, or know someone that is, let’s get started with our beginners guide to disc golf! 

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Here are two great apps for disc golfers.

UDisc udisc logo

If you hit up courses and haven’t discovered UDisc, you are missing out. UDisc is a digital scorecard, and so much more. With it’s extensive directory of courses and maps, it will show you to you next hole, help you keep track handicaps, and allow you to link up your PDGA #. It’s has been a great addition to my game, and I love to be able to keep track of my improvement on the course. While you still need to keep track of your discs, at least you won’t get lost finding your next basket!

“A Free UDisc Pro 1 month trial is included with the app.
A yearly subscription is just $5, less than half the cost of a disc.”

Udisc is well worth the small cost!

Perfect Putt 360 perfect putt 360 logo

Perfect Putt 360 is great if you have a basket at home, but it’s also great to use on a practice basket at the course. The putting app is great for building a routine around your putting practice. You first measure out five distances: 10′, 15′, 20′, 25′ and 30′. You then throw 10 discs at each distance, keeping track of number of makes with special attention to first and last throw. Extra points are awarded for first and last disc makes so focus up. As you progress in distance points progress in value. Perfect Putt 360 is a great tool to increase some repetition and normalize some distance putts into your game.

Last week, my arms while getting a great workout, were getting tired of carrying around my ten year old, half broken, Innova bag that I cram way too many discs into. I wouldn’t mind it, but it started to affect my game a bit. It’s a great little square bag that I’d take out over the last ten years or so, but the time has come for an upgrade! Personally, I like the minimalist approach to disc golf; the less discs, the less over-thinking it, but I would like a little extra room to try out a new disc or two. So where to start evaluating the right disc golf bags for me?

Weight

My round yesterday tracked us at 5 miles, wow! 27 holes over mountainous terrain. On a pitch and putt 9 hole course weight not matter much, but for expeditions (and lost disc hunting) weight might be an issue. And it’s not just the weight of the bag. Higher capacity and more storage means more added weight. On that note, make sure you clean out your bag before heading out.

Shape

On my trek yesterday I took out a new bag I picked up called the NutSac (great name). While I love this bag for the price, materials, capacity, and overall look, I found that it’s circular shape kept falling over to the point I was going to loose something from the storage or a disc. It was lightweight and easy to carry, but became an annoyance. For my hilly areas, I think a more square or rectangular bottom would perform better.

Style/Type

Disc golf bags come in lots of options these days. Choose from a backpack, napsack, or over the shoulder cooler-style bag. A few things to look for before you buy are the quality of the straps, the shape of the bottom (how will it stand), and the various capacity and encloses of storage.

Storage

How much storage is another important thing to consider when purchasing a new disc golf bag. What do you want to carry with you out there. Here’s a short list of what you might consider:

  • water/beverage
  • bar/snack
  • towel
  • mini disc marker
  • sand paper/repair kit
  • sunscreen
  • scuba gear

The list goes on. Consider your needs and find the right bag for you.

Disc Capacity

Obviously this is totally a preference thing. Remember, just because it can fit up to all those discs, doesn’t mean it has to. What you don’t take out with you could hold extra storage, or just a lighter load.

Good luck deciding on your next disc golf bag. There are a lot of factors to consider, there might be some compromise in there as well, and don’t be afraid to try a few out before making a decision. Amazon has a bunch, including the NutSac. Remember to check those return policies.

How to select the discs that go in your bag

Build your disc golf bag. It’s something that you will be doing throughout your disc golf days. Here are some ways to build your bag.

With so many discs out on the market, each available in unique plastics, you can really spend a long time finding the perfect discs for your bag. Most people start playing disc golf by going with a friend and using their discs. If they like it they might buy one or two depending on the color or shape. I did this. I then bought a few discs based on their look and played with them over and over and eventually started to figure out what they are supposed to be used for (ie. their disc flight ratings).

Eventually, over the course of a few years I realized a few of the discs I liked better than others. Some just seemed to fit in my hand better and released cleanly and went where I wanted them to go. Then I learned about the ratings and started seeking out discs that lended to the courses I liked to play and the types of throws I felt most comfortable with.

My friends always had these enormous bags they would take out and I wondered if they knew what each disc was capable of, after all they were better players than me, but not by much. After watching a few videos of the pros “What’s in my bag” on YouTube, I started to build a strategy for myself. And while part of it is just what I’ve had access too, I’ve began to see what kinds of discs I’d likely incorporate into my future bags.

Building a disc golf bag strategy:

1) Determine on number of discs you’re comfortable carrying

I want to build a bag that doesn’t have a ton of discs in it, between 10-12 max. I just feel that for my current needs I don’t need anymore than that. Some people haul around these 20+ disc bags and for me that just seems to much. At some point the paradox of choice has to interfere and I don’t want to be mentally stuck trying to decided between two discs.

2) Have a few discs molds of your favorite go to disc

One thing I noticed about the pros is that they rely on a handful of models of discs, in different plastics, weights, and wears. This kind of struck me when I first realized it. It makes sense though, you get comfortable with a particular disc in your hand, then each plastic lends itself to different wear and stability. So In my bag I try to have only a handful of models and some with different weight or plastics. For example, I’m currently holding two Innova Firebird’s: one at 150g one at 175g — the 150g is my go to disc, but I picked up the 175g for extra windy situations.

3) Change your bag depending on the conditions of the course

Disc selection is going to be different for everyone. That’s what makes the “What’s in my bag” series so interesting. For me, I currently have 4 distance drivers, 3 fairway drivers, 1 mid-range driver, and two putters, and one beat-up semi-experimental roller disc. So my bag is somewhat an all around bag right now, but depending on where you’re playing you might want to switch up your bag for the conditions of the course.

4) Buy and try – have a few experimental discs

There are literally thousands of discs on the market and if you’ve gotten to a spot where you want to dive deeper into disc golf, then try different discs! Try some distance drivers from MVP, some putters from DGA, a Mid-Range disc like the Roc3, and if you don’t like them sell them on eBay or Disccoursereview.com. Some will feel better than others and when you know the difference you’ll be a stud out on the course!

5) Take notes on practice rounds & aim for continuous improvement

disc golf notes Hands down the best way to continue to get better and to always have the bag that is perfect for your course is to take notes. I’ve been using the memo function on my android to make quick remarks from the day. Nothing too serious. Just reminders, discs that worked out particularly well on certain holes, and things I learned from the day. You’ll thank yourself later when the beers you had erased your memory (speaking from personal experience).

So that is how to build your bag. It can take time, and there’s probably at least one disc that is not in your bag that feels probably feels better in your hand and can get the job done better. Another plastic that is just around the corner — So try new discs! Don’t forget to bring a disc or four that you want to experiment with on practice rounds, and take notes! Load up that bag everytime you take off for a round and you’ll continue to knock strokes off your score.

What’s in my bag playlist

Daily Ruminations

Every disc golfer knows the feeling. You step up to a 20-foot putt with OB looming behind the basket. Your hand tightens on the disc. Your heart rate speeds up. You tell yourself, “Don’t miss this,” but deep down, you know the doubt is already there. And when you release the disc—just like you feared—it splashes out or sails long.

Why does this happen, even when you know you’re capable of making that putt? And more importantly—how do you stop it from happening?

The answer lies in the mental game. Physical skills only take you so far. If you want to reach the next level as a player, you need to train your mind just as much as your form. This post will walk you through a simple but powerful mental framework to quiet the negative voices, focus on execution, and start putting with real confidence.


Why Negative Thoughts Creep In

First, let’s clear something up: Negative thoughts during competition are completely normal. They’re not a sign of weakness—they’re just how your brain is wired.

🧠 The Brain’s Job is to Protect You

When you step up to a pressure putt, your brain perceives the situation as a threat.

  • The threat isn’t physical—it’s emotional.

  • Missing the putt might mean embarrassment, frustration, or even confirming a deep fear that you’re “not good enough.”

  • To protect you from that emotional pain, your brain tries to lower your expectations by feeding you negative thoughts:
    ➡️ “You’re going to miss this.”
    ➡️ “Don’t go OB.”
    ➡️ “Don’t blow it.”

This is your brain’s attempt to protect you from failure. But in reality, it creates the very outcome you’re trying to avoid. When you focus on avoiding failure, your body tightens up, your putting stroke gets mechanical, and you miss.

So how do you break this pattern? By shifting from a mindset of fear and consequence to a mindset of calm and execution.


6-Step Mental Game Reset

When you feel the negative voices creeping in, follow this mental reset to take back control:


1. Acknowledge the Thought (Without Engaging It)

When you notice the thought creeping in—“What if I miss?”—don’t fight it. Fighting the thought gives it power.

Instead, acknowledge it calmly:
“That’s a fact. I don’t have to engage with it.”

Example:
➡️ “There’s OB behind the basket. That’s a fact.”
➡️ “That’s just noise—I don’t need to react to it.”

The moment you acknowledge the fear without attaching to it, you create separation between yourself and the thought. That stops the spiral before it starts.


2. Break the Pattern with a Physical Cue (Reset)

Negative thoughts create a physical reaction—tightness in your grip, quickened breathing, shaky hands. You need to reset both your mind and your body.

✅ Step away from your lie.
✅ Take a deep breath.
✅ Say a simple trigger word:

    • “Commit.”
    • “Smooth.”
    • “Trust.”

This creates a hard reset between the negative thought and your next action.


3. Give Yourself a Positive Directive

Your brain needs a clear, positive instruction. Telling yourself “Don’t miss” focuses your mind on the negative outcome.

Instead, give yourself a positive directive:
✅ “Soft touch, center chains.”
✅ “Smooth release.”
✅ “Commit to the line.”

Positive commands lock your brain into execution mode rather than consequence mode.


4. Focus on a Small Target

Instead of aiming for the whole basket or gap, narrow your focus to a single spot, link or spot on the pole.

✅ This locks your mind onto a small target and prevents it from drifting toward the OB or imagining a miss.
✅ The smaller the target, the more precise your mind becomes.

Example:
➡️ “Hit that left chain link.”
➡️ “Aim for the center pole.”

Your brain can’t focus on fear when it’s locked onto a specific target.


5. Commit and Release (No Second-Guessing)

Once you’ve lined up, the thinking phase is over. Now it’s time to trust the process.

✅ You’re no longer trying to “make” the putt—you’re simply executing the stroke.
✅ Focus on the feel of the disc in your hand and the release—not the result.

Example:
➡️ “Commit and release.”
➡️ “Smooth stroke.”
➡️ “Follow through.”


6. Neutral Response After the Putt (Make or Miss)

If you make the putt—great. If you miss it—no emotional reaction. No frustration, no internal dialogue, no ego hit.

✅ Take a deep breath.
✅ Say: “Next shot.”
✅ Walk to the next hole with the same body language you’d have if you made it.

This is critical because if you give emotional weight to misses, your brain will learn to treat them as a threat. The goal is to make every putt feel emotionally neutral so your brain stops treating it like a life-or-death moment.


Example Scenario: Putting with OB Behind the Basket

❌ What Normally Happens:

  1. You see the OB.

  2. You think: “Don’t miss.”

  3. Your hand tightens.

  4. Your stroke becomes mechanical.

  5. You miss.

✅ What This Looks Like With the New Process:

  1. You see the OB.

  2. “Yup, that’s OB. That’s a fact.” (Acknowledgement)

  3. Step back. Deep breath. “Commit.” (Pattern Break)

  4. “Soft touch, center chains.” (Positive Directive)

  5. Focus on the feel of the disc. Small target. (Sensory Focus)

  6. Smooth release. (Commitment)

  7. If it misses: “Next shot.” (No Judgment)


💡 Why This Works

✅ You stop trying to control the outcome.
✅ You shift from a “fear of failure” mindset to a “trust in execution” mindset.
✅ You eliminate the fight-or-flight response by focusing on action instead of consequence.


🔥 Putting Mindset Cheat Sheet

  1. Acknowledge: “That’s a fact—I don’t have to engage with it.”

  2. Pattern Break (Reset): Step back → Deep breath → Trigger word.

  3. Positive Directive: “Soft touch, center chains.”

  4. Small Target: Focus on a single link.

  5. Commit and Release: Feel the stroke, not the result.

  6. No Judgment Afterward: “Next shot.”


💪 Final Thoughts: Confidence is a Skill

Most players think confidence comes from making putts. That’s backward. Confidence comes from how you respond to putts—both makes and misses.

➡️ Confidence is the result of training your mind to stay calm under pressure.
➡️ Confidence is knowing you can handle the outcome, no matter what it is.
➡️ Confidence is built on trust—and trust is built through process.

Start working this mental reset into your practice rounds and casual putting sessions. Once it becomes second nature, you’ll start walking up to every putt—whether it’s 15 feet or 45—with the same calm, focused energy.

That’s when the game changes. That’s when the chains start sounding different.

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“Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome.”

– Arthur Ashe
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“Champions get hit over and over and over. You know, it’s the champion that decides to keep moving forward. It’s how many punches can you take and keep moving forward until you win.”

– Doc Rivers (from The Playbook)
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“What is delayed is not denied”

– old proverb
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“At times you have to learn the steps to becoming a national champion, and one of those steps is losing, because it’s all about momentum, and momentum doesn’t mean it’s a positive thing. You can have momentum to lose and be defeated. You can have 24 hours to bask in your victory, or you got 24 hours to agonize in your defeat, and then we put one foot in front of the other and keep moving forward.”

– Dawn Staley
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“The key to success is to focus our conscious mind on things we desire not things we fear.”

– Brian Tracy
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