
Pre-registration is required to attend. We will not be offering on-site registration this year.
Directions to the clinic via the various entrances to The Championship will be posted soon. Stay tuned to the pictures tab and our Facebook event page.
Link: rebrand.ly/TPWDGCClinic
Please join us on the beautiful Winthrop University campus on Saturday, October 11th, for Throw Pink’s 12th event in conjunction with the United States Disc Golf Championship and the Throw Pink Women’s Disc Golf Championship.
Women and girls of all skill levels are welcome!
If you don’t have discs, that’s not a problem. There will be plenty available to use during the event. Please bring water and wear comfortable shoes.
We will start with a quick introduction and warm-up, followed by a disc golf instructional clinic (led by touring pros) that will get new players on their feet and refine the skills of those who have played before. We will wrap up the clinic and games by 4:00 pm
At that time, the official event ends, and participants are welcome to split up and play a fun, casual round on a beginner-friendly temporary course or head over and watch the lead card action.
The spectator course is on the traditional golf course designed by Andrew Duvall, the current USDGC and TPWDGC course designer.
The $30 fee ($20 for girls 12 and under) includes:
– A fun clinic
– A round of disc golf,
– A Throw Pink commemorative item
– A Throw Pink Finisher Medal
– Day Pass to the championship
– A charitable donation to GoJenGo.org
Please arrive 15 minutes earlier than 1:30 pm to pick up your player pack so we can kick off the event promptly at 1:30 pm.
If you have a ticket to the championship, you can enter any other entrance and just come to the spectator course area before 1:30 p.m. to check in.
If you do not have a ticket to the championship, you can only enter through the Ivy Street entrance, no earlier than 12:30 p.m.
CLINIC GROUPS EXPLAINED:
Beginner – This group is for our brand-new players who have just started playing, have never played before, or prefer being in a group of very new players for a more comfortable experience.
Intermediate – You play and know how to throw. You need help to improve your throwing, get tips on making more putts, and practice new throws you haven’t learned yet.
Advanced – If you play in tournaments, this is the group you need to be in, and/or you play regularly, and you have specific things you want to improve about your game. More distance, get out of trouble shots, putting in the wind, etc…