Baby boomers remember it as a simple pastime in which they
engaged on so many college campuses.
Several generations later, the skill of making an accurate
toss with what remains universally known as a Frisbee has become part of an
evolving professional sport, and New Britain is a cornerstone.
The sport once called Ultimate Frisbee with rules made up as
you went along is formally known as Ultimate Disc. The Connecticut
Constitution, members of the professional American Ultimate Disc League, play
their home games at CCSU’s Arute Field.
The team is being operated capably and modestly by the
players themselves. General
manager/coach/leading scorer John Korber leads by example. Vice president of
marketing and sales Rafe Steinhauer, a former cross country and track athlete,
plays a position known as “cutter,” but perhaps more importantly answers
inquiries into the sport’s burgeoning position.
“The professional league will help the sport as a whole,”
Steinhauer said. “It’s always been uphill battle to get the general public to
buy into the game as legitimate. We’re battling a short history.
“Lots of people play just for fun recreationally without
cleats and with tie-dye shirts. There’s nothing wrong with that. People play
softball in beer leagues. It’s the same split. There’s nothing wrong with
either form but they’re very different. Our version is a spectacular spectator
sport.”
BRIEF HISTORY: The Ultimate game was invented in 1968.
For the first 20 years, play proliferated primarily on
college campuses, where it developed what Steinhauer called, “a hippie stigma.”
The first competitive development occurred in the late 1980s
when the Ultimate Players Association was born. Four years ago, it was
“rebranded” as USA Ultimate. It became the governing body for competitive
amateur play and established national championships at the high school, college
and club (adult) levels.
Such tournaments have been going on for 25 years, Steinhauer
said, yet the stigma remains.
“There’s definitely a generational divide,” he said. “As
anybody 40 and up and they’ll say it’s just a bunch of hippies. Ask anybody in
their 30s and it’s an intensely competitive and perhaps the most aerobically
challenging team sport. It’s a split we deal with on a daily basis.”
THE GAME: Steinhauer has multiple reference points when he
evaluates Ultimate’s aerobic challenges.
The teams play 7-on-7 over the wide-open space of a football
field. Players cannot run with the disc; it must be advanced via the pass.
“It’s a constant series of sprints,” Steinhauer said.
A team earns a “point” or goal when its player catches a
pass in the end zone, which is 20 yards deep, twice as big as the area allotted
in football.
Substitutions are allowed only after points or between the
12-minute quarters. Points come much more frequently than soccer goals or
touchdowns. The Constitution’s last game played on May 27 produced a 28-21
victory over the Columbus Cranes. In other words, the teams successfully
crossed the goal lines nearly 50 times in 48 minutes.
Steinhauer said sports fans familiar with similar team
sports will pick up the game almost instantly.
“Anybody familiar with basketball and football would totally
get it,” he said. “It’s a very intuitive game. Any incompletion is a turnover.
The other team picks it up immediately. There’s no stopover with a change of
possession. Once you catch it, you have seven seconds to throw it, kind of like
a shot clock. It’s a lot of action and constant cutting.”
THE LEAGUE: The AUDL presently consists of two divisions.
The Constitution, 5-1 at press time, competes in the East
Division with the Philadelphia Spinners, Rhode Island Rampage and Buffal
Hunters. The West Division includes the central Ohio-based Cranes, the Detroit
Mechanix, the Indianapolis AlleyCats and the Louisville-based Bluegrass
Revolution.
The season runs April through July. Divisional playoffs
begin in mid-July. The inaugural league championship is slated for the
Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich., on Aug. 11.
THE TEAM: Steinhauer said the Constitution have an amicable
relation with its landlords at CCSU.
The games have attracted an average of 600 people. The first
game of the year drew 1,050. Unlike other professional teams, the financial
needs of the organization are much less. Steinhauer said the team can function
by drawing 700 per game with 500 per a first-year goal.
“Having the players chip in is absolutely vital,” he said.
“John Korber selected a team with an eye toward product. It’s an easy decision
to take the best 25 athletes who don’t care about the sport or the organization
but John chose 25 who are very good on the field and have dedicated themselves
to helping the sport and growing the business.”
He said the team’s strategy is based on the phrase, “Our
motto is product.”
“We have to represent our product, represent our
organization and the players have bought into that,” he said.
The team has access to all the amenities at Arute, providing
a comfortable setting for fans.
“Central has been very helpful,” Steinhauer said. “We pay a
good amount of rent but it’s a very nice facility. In my mind, it’s the best
facility in the league.”
Philadelphia plays at Franklin Field, the former home of the
NFL Eagles. Detroit plays at the massive Silverdome, once the Lions’ domain.
Neither team is averaging substantially more than the Constitution, which gives
those stadiums a rather cavernous look on game day.
“Arute is a great atmosphere,” he said. “You’re right on top
of the game. We wouldn’t trade with anyone.”
Ticket prices have a Rock Cat-like affordability at $6 per
game. The Constitution’s strategy mirrors that of the highly successful minor
league baseball team across town.
“I head a speech by
[NBA Dallas Mavericks owner] Mark Cuban,” Steinhauer said. “He said everyone
thinks the Mavs are about basketball, but they’re selling a form of
entertainment that people can’t get at a movie theater.
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