Outside the Huddle: Issue No. 3 – Defending a Hucker

Here’s the situation we presented to the panel:

You are in an elimination game against a team you have played several times this year. They have a very skilled deep thrower that typically plays as a handler, rarely going downfield. This player has hurt your team in the past by throwing long goals, regardless of the type of mark you use. Your scouting report coming in is simple: push this player deep and keep them away from the disc.

At halftime, this player has unusually already gone deep, successfully, 3 times. Once was on a called pull play. They have hucked for another goal, though not on a pull play. You are behind 8-6. What do you do in the second half? Should you continue to push this player away from the disc? What kind of defender, given your normal options (you can’t just put World’s Greatest Defender on them) should be used?


 

While a seemingly broad question, Issue 3 really boils down to a few key ideas. Ben van Heuvelen starts his response, and this entry, with a few of them: “On defense, your goal isn’t to shut down all options , because that’s impossible against a good offense. Rather, your goal is to dictate to the offense those options it can take. So, the first thing to realize here is: if Big Thrower hasn’t been able to make big throws, you’ve done something successful.”

Having a gameplan, especially one developed over the course of a season/career, is something players/coaches should trust. A frequent effort of gameplans in this sport are figuring out what certain teams/players want to do, and trying to take that away.

“Whenever lining up against a gifted opponent I have always found it helpful to ask myself: what does this player want to do? In this case, this player is most comfortable and probably most confident in a handler role, staying behind the disc and throwing goals rather than receiving them. When playing against teams that have a player like this, someone who excels in many aspects, always make them beat you with their Plan B or Plan C, never Plan A.”

“You take away a team’s strength and make them beat you with their weakness. If they do, you make them do it again, because it’s their f***ing weakness!” — Jon Gewirtz

This idea is nearly universal in the sport, and in all sports. Where trouble arises is when teams find ways to beat you with their second/third plans, like in the proposed scenario. Now comes the hardest question at all: do you make a change, or keep playing it out?

In my opinion, it doesn’t matter what adjustment you make as long as you make one. -Ryan Morgan

It’s important to note that most panelists make the distinction that change means tweaking matchups and individual strategies, not entire gameplans. Using different or alternating defenders against ‘Big Thrower’, changing what defenders do on the mark, and similar changes are the kinds of responses proposed, but most would still try and hold true to the main goal: don’t let ‘Big Thrower’ play his usual role as deep-throwing handler. “But again, the most important adjustment to make is to make an adjustment” -Ryan Morgan.

As a wise woman once said, never lose a game without playing zone. I think this thought answers the question but taken to a broader sense: never get beat over and over again without changing something. -Miranda Roth

There are team-wide changes that can be made as well, such as throwing different kinds of zones: standard zones; the “box-and-one”, which puts 6 players into zone positions while one would mark ‘Big Thrower’ regularly; and others.

You can also adjust your methods of denying this player the disc by changing pressures against his teammates: “It’s important to keep in mind that he’s not a handler by himself. That is, he’s has someone to complete the chemistry and that guy may be the one to really clamp down on.” writes Tully Beaty. Dan Heijman agrees: “What we need to do is ratchet up the intensity on their throwers. Make it so they don’t want the disc in their hands.”

There are tons of different small adjustments that could be made, and in an elimination game, you might need to use any and all that you can think of.

“Or…” says Chris Talarico, “if you don’t like these options, you can go back to shutting down the deep and allow him the underneath…and kick yourself after you lose for allowing the same guy to beat you the same way. Again.”

I think the most important thought process comes from Ben Wiggins, as usual:

“My gut usually sticks with the scouting report; I have a lot of faith in how I scout teams, and if I was sure 50 minutes ago that this guy is a better thrower than cutter, well, 50 minutes and some lost sweat shouldn’t change that. In fact, nothing in the first half has contradicted our report…heck, if we had been pushing him towards the disc, maybe we are already down 8-5 or 8-4. This might just be his day.”

I couldn’t agree more that long-developed strategies shouldn’t be abandoned at the first sign of adversity. Stick to your guns, trust your gameplan, and most importantly, trust your teammates.


 

Super excited to start reading The-Huddle for the x-th time, and hopefully encouraging others to do the same. I’m not sure that any other source has been this valuable.

Cheers!

Outside the Huddle: Issue No 2. – Trying Out

I wanted to eek this post out a little faster than I planned so that anyone/everyone looking to join an AUDL/MLU in the following days/weeks might be able to get some quality advice from the panel, which could make or break a try-out.

Spring brings the climax of the college season, as well as the beginning of club. Most club teams hold some sort of tryout; without adding new talent they are sure to fall off of the map sooner rather than later.

At this point in the year, thousands of ambitious players are cleating up to show that they are worth a precious roster spot. We asked our panel to give us their thoughts on the tryout process in general. Their answers demonstrate the complex nature of tryouts, both from the tryout’s perspective as well as from the viewpoint of the decision-makers.

If you are trying out for a team, or even if you are interested in how captains of various teams approach their tryout process…keep reading. The responses show a commitment to improving each team, but in a variety of different ways.

Below are several of the sub-questions we asked to provide structure for the panel’s answers:

Do young players have any chance of making the team as an offensive player? What about as a handler? As a hucker? What would they have to show you to prove their worth?

Is calm, conservative play better? Or do you want to see highlight reel moves, throws, and catches?

Say you are a young player with a specialty throw (something out of the normal repetoire). You are confident in that throw, but it doesn’t really fit easily into a team’s offense (rather, they could change how they play to take advantage of this talent).

Should you show this in tryout scrimmages?

What is most important: practices or tournaments?

How should tryouts behave and carry themselves? Some captains and coaches love people that ask a ton of questions, and others want people that want a lot of feedback. Or give their opinions. Or are silent, strong teammates. What are you looking for? Does the personality of a player figure large into whether they can make the team? What about an obnoxious player with tremendous talent?

Is there anything about the tryout process that you think teams should do more often?

Does everyone try out, or are returning players safe?

How long are your tryouts? Is this optimal?

For everyone trying out this year, we hope the answers to these questions from our writers proves to be helpful.

The premise of this Issue is simple: what should you do/how should you think/how should you act in order to give yourself the best chance to make the team (whichever one it is that you’re trying out for).

Continue reading

Outside The Huddle: Issue No. 1 – Horizontal vs Vertical

Horizontal stack offenses have become much more popular in the last decade at the expense of the previously ubiquitous vertical stack offense. Given equivalent talent, which type offense would you rather run in windy situations?

This question is one that captains and coaches struggle with each year, and is even more pressing at the club level, where October weather and Florida hurricanes put a premium on moving the disc into the wind. Not long ago, the Condors won a championship in a game with a single upwind point. To guide our panel, we asked the following sub-questions as well:

  • Which offense works better into the wind? With a strong downwind? What about a stiff crosswind?
  • What adjustments can you make strategically in either offense in a very strong (sustained 20-mph +) wind?

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Possibly the most prevalent question in all of Ultimate: “Which type of offense should we run?”, or in 90%* of cases, “Horizontal or Vertical?”

The question posed to the panel takes wind into consideration, which gives us some context with which to provide anecdotal reasoning and examples.

Continue reading

Outside the Huddle

Over the past/upcoming several weeks, I will have browsed, read, and taken notes on every issue and submission on what might be the single best Ultimate knowledge resource available today: Ben Wiggin’s The Huddle.

For those unfamiliar, it is a “magazine” of sorts. There are 29 issues, each dealing with a different specific topic of Ultimate strategy, technique, skills, opinions, and more. Within each issue, a panel of high level Ultimate players and minds give their own personal input on each topic. The result is a wonderful collection of varying views on a wide array of important topics and aspects of the sport.

For my Outside the Huddle series, I aim to ask some follow-up questions on most, if not all, of the issues. Hopefully I can find some community input (via the comments on this blog, reddit’s /r/ultimate, and more). I will do my best to research any past discussions on my own questions and find some possible answers.

There are also a notebook’s worth of invaluable statements and ideas, and I hope to collect and expand upon those that I find.

I plan to start this series as 2015 rolls in.

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Unfortunately, The Huddle has been closed for a couple of years. Read about the present/future state of the publication here.