Amara Grautski
http://www.nu-news.com/
The club men's ultimate Frisbee team, the "Gentlemen's Club", is set on
breaking the stereotype that club sports can't be competitive.
The
team is coming off of one of its best seasons, finishing second in the
sectionals tournament and fifth in regionals. On Saturday, the
Gentlemen's Club will head to Lancaster to compete in this year's
sectional tournament, facing teams from Boston College, Harvard and
Tufts.
But this kind of success doesn't come without hard work.
The
club, which practices an average of four times a week and travels to
tournaments across the country, like a recent one in Las Vegas, has a
history of scaring off freshmen, who don't pay enough attention to the
"ultimate" in ultimate Frisbee.
"My sophomore year … we started
out with 25 freshmen," said junior captain Dave Picard. "We made it
very clear, very early, that it was not a joke-around team. We
currently have zero people from that year … we went from 25 to zero in
a two-month span."
Picard, who has been with the team for four years, said this is a typical occurrence for the club.
"We
have a connotation of being a non-athletic sport, but people find out
very quickly that it is an athletic sport and it is a time commitment."
he said.
The half who stay are generally made up of people who
are ready to take the sport seriously, said Andrew Medeiros, a senior
captain on the team.
"People who stick around usually have played sports in high school," he said.
But that doesn't mean someone who wants to try out needs to have previous experience.
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