Randy Silvey bested a field of fifteen of the top freestylers in the world and was named Super Hein at the Gauther Brothers’ Seaside Super Hein competition in Seaside, Oregon on March 27, 2004.
Ouch! My Knee Hurts!
Yesterday I experienced what may be the worst injury of my freestyle career. Only about a minute into playing Wintershred with Greg Riley, I leapt for a brush and came down wrong. Very wrong. My knee moved in a direction it was not designed to move. I have had plenty of injuries – sprains, tendinitis, even broken bones – but nothing felt as wrong as that landing.
$2 Coupon For Shrednow Mugs
Player Reviews: The Secrets Of Pro Disc Freestyle

Over the winter, Dave Lewis and Z Weyand released their DVD, The Secrets Of Pro Disc Freestyle, which teaches freestyle skills ranging from basic throws and catches to airbrushing and delay moves, mixed in with footage of state-of-the-art pro level freestyle.
Have you seen The Secrets Of Pro Disc Freestyle? How did you like it? What was your favorite part? What moves did you learn from it?
Yahoo Users To Get Shrednow News
If you use My Yahoo, you can now keep up with the latest Shrednow news right on your My Yahoo page. Click here to add Shrednow’s latest headlines to your My Yahoo page.
Rankings: February 2004
The February Open and Women’s ranking lists show that the freestylers who competed at Jamie Chantiles’ random pairs event in San Diego were the first to benefit from the bigger ranking point scales introduced for 2004.
Spike Wins 2004 San Diego Round Robin
Jamie Chantiles hosted the first event of 2004, an experimental-format round robin pairs event in San Diego on January 25.
By random draw, six players were teamed with a different pairs partner over five competition rounds. The idea was to play with a variety of teams and have the opportunity to create routines with short-lead time. According to Chantiles, the format “is an excellent way to promote the sport in a public area, while honing your skills.”
The final standings reflect each athlete’s performance over all five rounds. World number 2 and current open pairs world champion Dave “Spike” Lewis lived up to his ranking by taking the title. Peter Laubert, known as one of the best at conceiving effective routines, followed in second, with 2002 open pairs world champ Joel Rogers in the third spot.
The Final Standings:
1. Dave Lewis
2. Peter Laubert
3. Joel Rogers
4. Tom Gleason
5. Jamie Chantiles
6. Ami Lewis
FPA Creates Online Results Archive
The Freestyle Players Association (FPA) has launched an ambitious project to document the history of competitive freestyle. Spearheaded by Larry Imperiale, the FPA has created an online database of tournament results that will eventually allow freestyle fans to research individual tournaments, player results and even create statistical reports of their own, such as the biggest winning margins, most finals in a row, most second place finishes without a win, or any other creative stat a visitor can think of.
To start, the database includes results from final rounds in 2003 as well as nearly complete results from some of the earliest freestyle competitions in 1974 and 1975. The FPA is currently looking for volunteers to enter results from other years. The FPA will provide the stats; volunteers can enter as much as they want. With the help of the freestyle community, the FPA hopes to have 25 years of results available online by the end of 2004.
What statistics would you look up in the FPA’s new database?
Indoor Romashred Videos
Fabio Sanna has edited videos from December’s Indoor Romashred to showcase the best moves of each of the 30 Romashred players. Each video file is about 1.5 megs. The files for the top players are larger, since Fabio was kind enough to include several extra combos for the finalists.
Direct links to the thirty videos are below. [NOTE: the videos are no longer available online, but contact me if you are interested in seeing any of them]