#
![]() Wanna write to the forum?
If you want to contribute posts to the forum, send an email and our webmaster will sign you up and send you a login and password ![]() |
![]()
![]() Well well well . . . what can I say? Central Europe's best 18 hole disc golf course, and one of it's most challenging, due to being both extremely long and making great use of the forested areas for challenging corridors and twists and turns. Thanks to our Slovak friends Martin Kricka and Mr Stefan Dobrev for organising a fantastic tournament, and for having the foresight to choose such a wonderful location for the showpiece event of the Slovak disc golf calendar, the Slovak Open in Smolenice. And Central Europe's best country Hungary also sent their best team of men for this event. From the 99 year old Jozsi bá' through to the 9 year old Benny Zalán (is he actually 9 years old or does he just play like it?) all walks of life were represented here. The stoneworker, the teacher, the banker, the lawyer, the IT professional . . . and on the disc golf course it doesn't matter who you are, the only thing that counts is how your discs fly and where they land! And when the dust had settled, after three gruelling rounds on the 3000m+ course, a clear winner had emerged. Dani Hatvani representing Magyarország disc golf was first by a large margin, with Otfried Derschmidt from Austria also second by a large margin. Third equal went to Dylan J. Cooper and Bernd Wender, after Dylan squandered a two stroke lead on the final hole. Fifth went to semi-local and all round nice-Czech-guy, Lukas Filandr. The women's division was won by a huge margin by Irmgard Derschmidt, with Caroline Gould in second place. So after two rounds of the Central European league, things had evened out on the table for the men, while Irmgard with two wins had taken a solid lead in the womens division. Could she make it a perfect 300 with two tournaments to go? Otfried Derschmidt and Dylan J. Cooper were now equal with one second and one third place each on 177 points, and Dani Hatvani was only a couple of points behind with a fifth and a first, on 174. Bring on Buschberg! |
||||||||||