Columbia University Ultimate Frisbee Team
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Ultimate Frisbee, sometimes abbreviated Ultimate, is an intercollegiate club sport, represented at our fair university by the Columbia University Ultimate Frisbee Team.
History
1974
- The Columbia University Ultimate Frisbee Team was founded by David "Buddha" Meyer in the fall of 1974.
1975
- Dave "Buddha" Meyer, takes junior year abroad and Larry Horlick and Jeff Birnbaum capatin the team for the 1975-1976 academic year. The team's record is untarnished by victory.
1976
- Dave "Buddha" Meyer, a senior returns from Lomdon School of Economics & is captian of the team.
- The team won its first game at Yale on September __, 1976. This was also Steve Kane [and Chris Schmidt's] first game. A coincidence - I think not.
- The Fall 1976 Record (2-2, excluding 2 scrimmages w/ Bronx Science & 1 with Stuyvtstan, all Ws)
Fri 9/__/76 vs Bronx Science on South Field W (scrimmage) Sat 9/__/76 at Princeton L Sat __/__/76 at Yale 21-20 W (KG thinks it was 22-21) Sat __/__/76 vs County College of Morris at Central Park 18-14 W Sun __/__/76 at Webb 15-10 L Called due to darkness
=== 1977 ===
- For the spring 1977 season, Budddha got John Anthony, a Columbia graduate student; Peter Bloeme, the then reigning Frisbee World Champion and a graduate of Bronx High School of Science; and Mark Danna, a well known "free-styler" living in NYC to join the Columbia squad. The team discovered its potential in its second game of the season at when Buddha taught the team how to play a zone on the subway ride up to Baker Field & the team narrowly lost 25-24 to Cornell, one of the top teams in the country (Cornell had Jon JC Cohn and Jim Herrick, both of whom are in the Ultimate Hall of Fame). That season's team consisted of several "athletes" (certainly athletes by Ultimate's then standard of "athletic"), including refugees from Columbia's other sports programs, including Jerry McManus (baseball) and Bob Jarrett and Michael Forlenza (lightweight football), Steve Kane, a self-acknowledged, but nonetheless excellent, goal hanger, running around to get open for Buddha, Bloeme, John Anthony & Ken Gary to throw to. A typical play would have a Bloeme throw-off that pinned the other team in the corner by their goal line (this was before the "brick" rule); Columbia would then apply its zone (often a "force side") and upon a turnover Columbia would score, often with Buddha throwing an air-bounce wrist flip (that is not a typo) to someone in the end zone.
- The team qualified for the 1977 East Coast Championship in April/May 1977. In its first single elimination game, Columbia lost to Penn State, the eventual East Coast champion.
- The Spring 1977 Record (8-4, including play-off)
Sat 03/05/77 vs Glassboro at Central Park 28-13 L Sat 03/26/77 vs Cornell at Baker Field 25-24 L Sun 03/27/77 vs U New Haven at South Field 42-8 W Sat 04/02/77 vs RPI at Baker Field 27-14 W (very cold) Sun 04/03/77 vs Summit HS at South Field 25-9 W Sun 04/03/77 vs Hastings Club at South F 18-11 W 04/9?10?/77 at County Collge of Morris 37-13 W vs Penn at CCM 25-20 W Sat 04/16/77 vs Yale at Baker Field 35-14 W Sun 04/17/77 vs Princeton at Baker Filed 29-26 L Sun 04/24/77 at Webb 19-8 W 04/30?/77 vs Penn State at Amherst 15-13 L Eastern Championship at Amherst. Penn State
- Fall 1977: In the fall of 1977, Steve Kane & Jerry McManus were the co-captains, and despite the loss of Buddha & Bloeme, the team improved. Other players joining at this time were Muarice Matiz (a cross-counrty refugee); Luis Pacheco (a varsity soccer player), and freshmen Ernie Cicconi, Paul Tvetenstrand and Bob Kennelly. and others ----. The highlight of the fall season was the crushing defeat of then top nationally-ranked Rutgers at Rutgers. (By coincidence a poster for this game is on page __ of Ultimate the First Four decades). In contrast to the fall of 1977 when Columbia had Buddha and Bloeme, Columbia's humiliating defeat of Rutgers, by a bunch of non-New Jersey, no-name players was an announcement that Columbia was a team to be reckoned with (even though one should never end a sentence with preposition).
- The Fall 1977 Record (5-2)
Sat 9/24/77 at UConn 30-10 L Sun 10/2/77 at U New Haven 26-8 W Sat 10/8/77 at County College of Morris 18-16 W Sat 10/15/77 at Princeton 23-18 L Sun 10/16/77 vs UPenn at Baker Field 32-27 W Sat 10/29/77 at Vassar 32-13 W Sun 11/12/77 vs Webb at Baker Field 26-25 W
Note: These games are being played with 24 minute halves.
1978
- 1978 Florida Trip
- Fall 1978. End of season upset of Boston Frisbee Club (BFC) Boston Aerodisc(BAD) (their only loss of the season). Columbia teaches a very raw Pat King (who later becomes the founder and star of NEW YORK/NEW YORK, the Ultimate World Champions for several years in the 1980s) the intracies of the game.
- Winter 1978-1979. UPA founded; new regions; NY in Northeast Region; NJ in Mid-Atlantic. Likley showdown between BFC/BAD & Columbia.
1979
- Spring 1979. Florida trip (fun but not many victories). team never quite clicks (plays about .500). In Northeast semi-final at Amherst [confirm], loss to Cornell on a tipped disc goal with time running out. Two unnamed players (Strage & Gigi oversleep - who would have thought such responsible young men would do that?). Cornell goes on to upset BFC/BAD; thus BFC/BAD's only losses in the 1978-1979 were their final games of the fall & the spring.
- Fall 1979. Heiffers formed. Is this when the Schmidt Rule comes in ?
- Winter 1980. We win Syarcuse tourney (was this the 1st or 2nd one)?
1980
- 1980 Florida Trip. Last minute car plans change so only 8 players go in Steve Kane's parents' station wagon - Steve Kane, Chris Schmidt, Bob Kennelly, Mike Stage, Wally Don, Ken Gary, Ernie Cicconi and Jeff Coffin. The team goes undefeated, despite playing many doubleheaders with only 1 sub. Columbia would have won by a larger margin, but Mike Strage confuses Ken Gary when he receives a throw-off.
1981
In the photo from L to R are: Bob Jarrett, Les Fritzemeier, Steve Kane, Jim Drennan (looking skyward), Phil Hirshhorn (dropping disc, which happened frequently at this tourney as Columbia played very poorly), Chris Schmidt, Dave Rosenfeld, Tom Jacobson, Jeff Coffin, Paul Tvetenstrand, Chris Klein, Chris Betts, Mike Strage, Greg Telonis. This photo was later turned into a prize winning Christmas tree ornament.