Worlds Drama, Muddy Majors, and PCS Open Showdowns

What’s up, discgenerates? It’s The Disc Golf World. I’m Jefferson, and alongside me as always the one with all the holes in his game—Swiss Cheese. We’re recapping all the disc golf you may have missed this weekend, from world championships to aces, blown leads, and whatever the PCS turned into. Let’s dive in.

European Disc Golf Festival: Mud Watch 2025

In two weeks, it’s European Disc Golf Festival time. But will the grass be ready? That’s the question on everyone’s mind after last weekend’s Estonian Song Festival, which left Tallinn Song Festival Grounds looking like a middle-aged man’s hairline after nearly 100,000 people stomped through in the rain.

The organizers have less than 11 days to get it ready. They’re staying positive. The lead organizer said the conditions are “poor but not hopeless,” which is exactly what my high school counselor said about my future. Gotta love the optimism.

Some fans are skeptical the venue was a good choice in the first place. But honestly, most pros have called this one of the most professional events they’ve played. Changes are already planned if mud remains a problem. They’re prepared to adjust fairways (or “lanes,” whatever that means) between rounds. Safety first, complaints second. We love to see it.

Shoutout to Disc Golf Fanatic for keeping the community updated with custom maps showing potential trouble spots. If you want to stay in the loop on MudFest 2025, hit them with a follow—and of course, make sure you’re subscribed here so you don’t miss us roasting it in real time.

Kristin Latt’s Roller Coaster at PCS Open

Let’s talk about Kristin Latt. Fans have been praying for that classic dominant Latt performance after a rough stretch: blown leads, USWDGC heartbreak, and a missed comeback at Preserve.

At PCS, it looked like her get-right event. She went 3 down in the first four holes and rattled off seven straight birdies. Even with a triple on 18, she led by three going into day 2. But the disc golf gods had other plans.

Day 2 started with controversy when her drive hit a spotter and landed OB. Did the guy even try to get out of the way? Looked like a Norwegian folk dance routine. She added OB strokes, missed mandos, and yet somehow still tied the hot round with Ida Letomaki to extend her lead to six over Evelina Salonen.

Day 3? Disaster. She went three over in six holes, missed five of eight C1 putts on the final day, and blew a seven-stroke lead to finish tied for second with Anniken Steen, who secured her first podium of the year. Meanwhile, Evelina is out here riding back-to-back wins and stealing all the confidence in Scandinavia. Not a great look for Kristin heading into Worlds.

PCS Open MPO: Hammes vs Buhr

Day 1, Adam Hammes threw a clean 10 under for the lead. Gannon Buhr responded with an 11 down on day 2, jumping 8 spots and taking the lead by hole 2. But Adam didn’t flinch.

We got vintage Gannon highlights, including back-to-back 60-foot par saves and a 39-footer on 8, plus another 60-footer on 9 for a three-stroke swing. The basket might as well have been a suggestion for Hammes on that hole. He regrouped like the mature pro he is and stayed tight.

The deciding moment was hole 16. Hammes threw a dime off the tee. Buhr had a poor drive followed by a messy approach, hit an early tree, went OB twice, and took a double. Hammes walked away with his second win of the season—and arguably the best trophy reveal on tour. Dare I say it? Adam Hammes might be the most underrated disc golfer out there.

US Masters Worlds: Ohn’s Five-Peat and Oman’s Breakthrough

FPO Masters: Ohn Scoggins vs Jennifer Allen

Over in Minnesota, the Masters World Championships delivered another banger. Ohn Scoggins was chasing her fifth straight title, but Jennifer Allen wasn’t making it easy. They were tied after 10 on the final day thanks to an Allen birdie and an OB slip from Ohn. But Scoggins stayed clutch with a 90-foot par save, while Allen’s putting fell apart with a three-putt double on 13. Ohn closed it out like the GOAT she is, winning her fifth straight Masters World Championship. Insane.

MPO Masters: Paul Oman vs Joe Rovere

The MPO side was equally wild. Joe Rovere was looking for his fourth straight title and traded blows early with Cale Leiviska (who was practically mayor of the course). Cale led after two rounds, but back-to-back off rounds at Kaposia let Rovere and Paul Oman catch up.

Championship Sunday was absolute fireworks. Joe started hot but lost the lead to Dutch Napier after some uncharacteristic putting misses. Dutch went on a four-hole birdie stretch, dropped an eagle on 12, but found OB on 13, opening the door for Rovere. They tied things up at 41 under before Dutch nailed a big C2 putt on 17. Rovere couldn’t answer, settling for third. Dutch tied Oman at the top to force a playoff.

The playoff was pure drama. On hole 1, both parked it. On 18, Tall Paul landed safe while Dutch went OB, giving Paul Oman his first world title. Honestly one of the best finishes we’ve seen in Masters Worlds history. Huge congrats to Oman—absolute legend move.

Final Thoughts

That’s everything that shocked the disc golf world this weekend. Worlds drama, muddy fairways, epic playoffs, and some old-man baller putts. If you don’t want to miss anything ever again, hit that subscribe button down below. And if you want the real unfiltered stuff, check out the Patreon for the Spit Out podcast.

Big thanks to everyone supporting the channel. Without you discgenerates, we wouldn’t even be going to Finland for Worlds. We appreciate the hell out of you. See you next time!

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