Ultimate
Frisbee tests character, fitness
By Alexandra Robbins
Special for USA
TODAY (April 2, 1999)
When Ultimate
Frisbee makes its debut as a medal sport in the 2001 World Games in
Japan, it's a safe bet that not one referee's call will be disputed. There
won't be any refs.
As the only
self-officiated team sport in the Games, ultimate frisbee is quickly
becoming a popular option for less traditional-minded athletes. Ultimate
attracts "an eclectic bunch," says Michael Guiietz, Ultimate Players
Association (UPA)
managing director. "The people are different a little bit alternative,
but they really are athletes."
Many ultimate
players are drawn to the sport because of its underlying principle:
the "spirit of the game," which players use to refer to the fact
that they must call
their own fouls and boundaries, even in national
and international competition. If a player accused of a foul disagrees with
the call, the team with possession keeps it. If players cannot resolve a
dispute,
occasionally they ask an observer to make the call.
"There's a
saying that ultimate doesn't build character; it reveals character,"
says Jim Parinella,
a five-time open national champion with his Boston based team
DoG. "It gives individuals the opportunity to display their personalities
on the field,
whether they're going to be fair in their dealings with people or weasel
their way out of things."
During the 1995
World Ultimate Club Championships in England, the DoG squad was losing
19-18 when the opposing, San-Francisco -based team passed into the end zone.
When Parinella dived for a block, the receiver
cried foul.
"The other team
asked me if I had blocked the pass, but I couldn't say for sure,"
Parinelia recalls. "So I said I didn't the other team scored and won the
game 20-18. If I had
said I had blocked the shot, my team would have gotten possession
instead."
The players'
responsibility to govern their own actions leads to fewer physical altercations
than in other sports, says Kate Coyne, a member of four-time defending
national women's champions Lady Godiva.
You're not policed;
you police yourselves," she said. "In sports with refs, people
try to get away with as much as they can. In ultimate you're accountable
to everyone."
Guiietz estimates
that about 150,000 Americans participate in ultimate, which has
counted former and current NFL players Shannon and Sterling Sharpe
and Olympians Picabo Street and Eric Heiden among its club players.
Ultimate, a
high-endurance sport with few basic rules, combines the nonstop movement
of soccer, the defensive strategies of basketball and the passing of football,
former US. masters team captain Andy Borinstein says.
The sport revolves
around passing a plastic disc. On a rectangular area shaped similarly
to a football field, seven-player squads must complete a pass in the opposite
end zone to score. To advance the disc, the player with possession has 10
seconds to pass in any direction. Athletes may not move with the disc or
initiate physical
contact with another player.
Despite its lack of
publicity, ultimate is quickly gaining popularity with high school
students, says Amherst (Mass.) Regional High School coach Tiina Booth, who
oversees one of only
a few boys varsity ultimate teams in the country "One
of my players made a good analogy. You know when someone shoots a jumper
and there's a
crackle in the net? He said every time you throw or catch the disc you get
that crisp snap, and that's why he found it so addictive," Booth says.
Because of the
simple rules and the low cost of the sport ultimate requires only
a disc and cones or other boundary markers - AmeriCorps, the Boy Scouts
and the Boys and
Girls clubs of America have incorporated it into their programs,
"Ultimate is a
team-building exercise we can teach elementary and middle school kids
easily without a lot of rules," says Karen Labat of AmeriCorps.
"It's something
that is low-cost, no-contact, builds self-esteem and encourages physical
fitness."