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All-Region 2022: Metro East (D-I Men's)

I believe #36 from RIT is Andrew Gallagher

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#31 (RIT) is Kobe Oley

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Also there should only really be one name getting talked about for Coach of the Year in this thread, and that’s Justin Pierce. Cornell won the region in the fall with a team stacked with alumni club talent, particularly on offense, with 5 starting O line slots going to alumni consistently. For him to come on board midway through the fall (around October I believe), and forge a team that came back stronger in the spring featuring double digit rookies is a true accomplishment. There were no other teams at this tournament who could run 20+ players deep besides Cornell, and that dedication to individual development and team culture cannot be understated.

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Thanks Oscar, Yoyo and Jacob for shouting me out!
Bing has played every team in the region (besides Stony Brook), so here was our take on this year’s nominations:

First Team All Region
Jeremy Bernier (UConn (POTY))- We remember playing UConn in the fall at Lobster Pot and revolved our lines every time he took the field. His play in the finals at regionals was also spectacular. We saw how he hit 5 perfect hammers in a row to lead the huskies to natties. His composure and sportsmanship on the field should make him one of the most respected players in the region.

Oscar Kohut (Columbia)- “The swiss army knife”. This kid can do it all. Oscar was able to get open on deeps and unders and had excellent throws. He is a coach’s dream player and can fit any role on any team.

Chris McLaughlin (Rutgers)- Bing played Rutgers twice last fall and I had the privilege to mark up against Cannon at Empire tryouts. Cannon is a nightmare to guard in the backfield. His oi flick blades could destroy any team’s soul.

Ben Goldman (Cornell)- You can’t hate this guy, but his throws… you can. His scoober’s killed our zone and he has every throw in the books. No matter how many times we said “no upline” on defense, this guy managed to always get the disc.

Jacob Latronica (CCSU)- I genuinely feel so bad for Central. They have such a good team but just don’t have the numbers. It was an honor to play against Jacob. Super athletic guy who can run an entire offense. We tried to have a no big mark on him, but he always managed to get a huck off. Add a couple more guys to his team, and I can really see CCS as a big regional contender next year.

Kobe Oley (RIT)- We genuinely thought you guys would’ve taken the region. No matter how many tournaments or how many teams we faced, your zone is the best we have ever seen. Kobe was a key player during zone points, and when we saw you on offense you became a constant work horse. Great teammate, nice guy, and always a gem to play against.

Masayuki Nagase (Yale)- We had a bit of a call heavy game against yale, but it was still probably our favorite game of the tournament. Masayuki had phenomenal throws and excellent communication on the field which really separated him from most other handlers that we played against. Despite the intensity of the game, Masayuki was always composed and led his team to a great win.

Shoutout

Hillel Rosenheim (Bing)- We unfortunately lost Hillel this season to a torn ACL at empire tryouts, but we genuinely think that if he was healthy, he would be the Player of the Year. He was our tall lanky handler. H killed it this season. We played PONY in the Fall and after a sick lay out d on one of there starting o-line guys, he quickly caught the coaches attention and was later approached for interest on a tryout.

Second Team All Region

Luke Smith #23 (Bing) – “The Tim Duncan of the Metro East”. This kid has the best fundamentals. Luke is a teammate we all look up to and is one of the nicest guys on and off the field. He has lock down handler defense, and as soon as he gets moving, he is a matchup nightmare.

#7 (Syracuse)- I know Syracuse and Bing are probably one of the biggest rivals in the region, but I gotta say every single time we have played, the matchup between #7 and I has been nothing but spirited. This guy can put you on clamps and I had a really tough time getting open on you.

Drew Hollahan (Bing)- “The Grave Digger”- Drewski can put anybody in the coffin. This guy went to lobster pot, and at tourney central clocked in a vert of 11’6. He’s insane. Period. Crazy athlete and our biggest deep threat.

Jack Waxman (Cornell)- Great cutter for Cornell, really spirited guy and has his fundamentals down. We always see you grinding on those unders.

Matt Johnson (Columbia) – Matt is a phenomenal player, and teammate. Barely any turns and we were struggling to find matchups against him when we played Columbia at Brooklyn.

Bobby Elston (CCSU)- Big Boy. Big Plays.

Martin Bustamante (Buff) - We love playing Buff. Gooch, I think you totally deserve to be on this thread. You have crazy chest high layouts and are a tough matchup for anybody on our team. Loved playing with you and your boys at tryouts too.

Freshman of the Year:

James Pardo (#40) (Bing)- Pardon Me, but I wanted to mention James on this thread. He was the kid in the hat on our team who was either our reset handler or took the ace position in the stack. He has incredible layouts, throws, and I can’t wait to see how he develops going forward. In my eyes he was the best freshman that Binghamton has ever seen. Truly humble guy, but also a better friend.

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Cornell had an absolutely stacked coaching staff this year, led in the Spring by the one and only nilla wafer: Justin Pierce. The Buds have historically struggled to make comeback wins, but this year, fueled by his simple mid-game adjustments, and his ability to get us focused, energetic, and confident, we have 3 comeback Ws in the books (Buffalo and RIT at sectionals, and Harvard at ACO). Every other team wants a bit of Nilla’s insight, so I will share a bit: he always emphasizes to us the importance of focusing on playing to our strengths, and not worrying about watching film of the other teams or anything (our coaches have got that covered).
He’s also a wizard with the flip, For these reasons, I nominate Nilla for coach of the year.

Also, if we’re talking about freshman pullers, Patrick Moore has got to be in the conversation with Tyler Mackey.

Can I also mention freshman Davith Chan playing nearly every point of regionals, because no line is complete without him? He topped it off by playing 8 straight points against UConn in the finals? DC = Daddy

Finally, I want to spotlight Sam Hinson (Shinson), because I haven’t seen his name here yet. He was the fearless leader of the Buds, keeping our systems running like a well oiled machine. He’s average height, but he skies multiple piles per game, usually toeing a line while he’s doing it. I often hear opponents on the sideline say “he’s their best player” when he runs by. If he doesn’t make all region, it’s rigged.

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Cornell Shout-Outs

Ben Goldman
The junior captain of Cornell is a matchup nightmare. Coming off the club season with Sprout, he played mostly D-Line in the fall before taking over the O-line reigns in the spring. He can handle, cut, and defend the other teams best player.

James Mullmann
Cornell’s best deep cutter missed Regionals but had an incredible season nonetheless. His combination of size, speed, and smart decision making drew many teams best defender. He went every other throw on universe point to win Sectionals.

Davith Chan - Rookie of the Year
This rookie was at times the best player on the field for Cornell. His jump from the fall to the spring was likely the most integral part of Cornell’s sustained success. Likely no better example of his impact than his game against Rutgers where he took on Iggy all game, and threw for multiple breaks including the game ending break side push pass.

-Jack Waxman
-Sam Hinson
-El Hare
-Neal Vasireddi
Two O-line and Two D-Line players that took on huge responsibilities and contributed heavily to Cornell’s success.

Non-Cornell

Jeremy Bernier
Jeremy had more success than anyone else this year breaking through the Cornell zone. His composed play was integral in bringing Uconn back to win regionals.

Cannon
Likely the player who demanded the most time game planning for. Cannon is a game-breaking thrower who can find the endzone from anywhere on the field. After his incredible performance against us last fall, we did not take him lightly this time around.

Oscar
Dangerous handler who took good shots and was effective against the zone. A good defender on the turn as well.

Gooch
Buffalo gave us great games in the fall and spring. At the center of those was Gooch who is constantly moving and putting throws into dangerous spaces.

Hillel
Hillel played an amazing game against us in fall sectionals, pushing the finals game to universe point. Would of loved to play against him again in the spring.

Coaches
Justin Pierce/Tanner Yuhas/Matt Burke
Our coaching staff was incredible this season, and so integral in returning to the finals after loosing 11 alumni. From player development to game planning, they put in an incredible effort this season. We will miss Justin and Matt dearly.

Uconn’s coach
While Jeremey was great, what stood out most to me against Uconn was their discipline from top to bottom of the roster. They clearly implemented strong fundamentals that payed off in the biggest moment.

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Hey all,
I can’t really ID players for other teams since my memory isn’t too good so apologies for the buds bias but,

My biggest pick is Davith Chan AKA DC no. 31 for freshman of the year. His plays, throws, agility, and passion are incredible without any caveats let alone considering he’s in his first year of competing in ultimate. How many people do you know that could punch in lefty scoober goals within 6 months of playing? I think that goes to show that he has the talent and confidence of a player with much more experience under his belt.

Additional players of note for the buds:

Ben Goldman no. 20
Our strongest threat of a handler, can find any huck he wants, and all the tricky breaks to bust open a zone. His first step separation was crucial to our offense getting the disc out of difficult positions as well as scoring from dead disc end zone sets.

El Hare no.18 (wore 19 at regionals)
This is me, so maybe this will sound arrogant but our D line was heavily dependent on me for a few reasons, first I was our primary puller and it gave our zone a lot of really good starts pinning O lines in corners(example second half break against UConn ). When we got turns I was a huck threat both throwing and receiving, tallying up stats for both goals and assists

Jack Waxman no. 4
Jack was huge for us on Offense, particularly running popper against zone. This guy doesn’t get tired. He also is a great crossover to D for kill lines, often coming up with clutch skies. Finally to round out the package he has a great backhand huck which while he doesn’t use it as prolifically as the previous two players mentioned when he does throw it it gets the job done.

James “Vet” mullmann no. 1
While Vet couldn’t come to regionals due to illness, his stats from the rest of the season speak for themselves. He is a ridiculous deep threat often finishing weekends with easy double digit goals. also he has one of the nastiest flick hucks in New York 60 yards is light work

Okay last thing to say is coach of the year honors: Justin pierce AKA Nilla stepped up as our new head coach part way through the fall semester as our head coach for the past few years Matt Burke had to move away to the west coast for the spring. Nilla brought insight to the team refining our offenses plays, our force middle defense set and touching up the zone that Burke thought us. His presence at games is amazing, calling for adjustments and putting together lines that brought us to several key comeback victories throughout the season. If there is a reason he shouldn’t be coach of the year it’s because he makes us do way too much ladders at wam ups, but hey nobody’s perfect.

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Hi, I’m Geo (number 14 on Stony Brook), my team didn’t make regionals this year but I want to shout out the most noteworthy players I saw throughout the season. Disclaimer, I’m probably missing a lot of people, I don’t pay attention a lot when I play and this is mostly people from Stony Brook’s section.

First from my team:

  • Alan Yi: As Stony’s captain he led our team in spirit and on the field and is a prime example of what an ultimate player should be. He’s an offensive machine, and can really do it all as a handler and cutter. He broke down zones with his over the tops and quick shifty throws and never stopped moving as a cutter making him a nightmare to guard. The only thing that stopped him was fatigue because he played almost every point throughout sectionals.
  • Brandon Chan: Brandon is probably one of the best handlers in the region. He plays aggressive shut down handler D but his real superpower is his poise with the disc. He can throw anywhere he wants on the field with his quick break throws, huge hammers, and big hucks. He got injured before sunday of sectionals but his presence would have been a difference maker in the game to go against rutgers.

Other noteworthy people:

  • Jeremy (UCONN) : Yea he’s good.
  • Danny (#1) (UCONN) : Danny was crazy athletic, played crazy good D, and would always get the disc on the off chance Jeremy got shut down.
  • Oscar (Columbia) : Oscar did it all for Columbia with his pulls, his poise with the disc in his hands, shut down defense, and being able to come down with a lot of hucks. I question his eligibility all the time.
  • Yoyo (Yale) : I didn’t get to play them in the spring but in the fall he put Yale on his back and brought them to semis.
  • #5 (Princeton) : I remembered this guy as the dude who traveled a lot, but was a super athletic cutter and played great D.
  • Peggy (Hofstra) : He’s tall, athletic and repeatedly threw almost full field flick hucks, Hofstra would not be the same team without him.
  • There’s a lot of Rutgers people who should be on here but it’s hard to pick any of them out considering how cohesive their squad is (Issac Arthur and Alec are probably some of the regions best defenders, Cannon was great offensively and Declan before he got hurt)

All Freshman

  • Mackey (Rutgers) : Great throws, pretty hard to stop in the handler space.
  • Iggy (Rutgers) : Iggy is crazy athletic which made him a nightmare on defense and offense.
  • Derringer (Yale) : I had no idea he was a freshman which is even more insane, he’s athletic and is already one of Yale’s main handlers
  • Flynn McCarthy (Stony) : I don’t know if I can include him here because he’s a sophomore, but he is a rookie. He’s only been playing frisbee for 3 months and is already a top cutter on our squad. He’s ridiculously fast, plays lockdown D, and got multiple layout Ds against Iggy in the game to go which is no easy feat. Everyone in this thread should keep a lookout for him in the coming years because you’re gonna have to make a game plan against him
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First Team All Region

Jeremy Bernier #4 (UConn) - One of the most composed players I have seen at the college or club level. Hits insides and arounds at will (inside flick is nasty), gets open for every reset, big and fast enough to be a threat downfield, the guy can do it all. Easily top 3 players in the region if not #1.

Aaron Maymin #1 (Bing) - Didn’t get the chance to play him this spring but saw him twice in the fall. He is a shifty athlete that knows when and where to be. He can handle in the backfield with confidence then roof you downfield. Love the fire Aaron plays with.

Matt Johnson #6 (Columbia) - Columbia’s big boy. Matt is tall and extremely athletic making him a menace downfield. I’ve seen him give guys the work at Empire practice and bring that to the fields of the metro east, scary. Don’t sleep on his lefty throws either.

Oscar Kohut #2 (Columbia) - Huge throws from the guy. He was the fire of Colombia and let everyone know. His big hucks matched with Matt’s athleticism was a nightmare for any team. Don’t get on his bad side.

Jack Waxman #4 (Cornell) - Stop running dude. Jack was one of Cornell’s major threats downfield this season. Smart cutting combined with speed and agility made him one of the best cutters in the region. Combined with backhand hucks he is a very complete player.

Ben Goldman #20 (Cornell) - Can’t miss him with that hair. Easily one of the best handlers in the region. Solid throws all around (lefty scoober yk yk), squirrely in the reset space, and real physical on D. Excited to see him next year.

Geo Zheng (Stony) - Even though Stony wasn’t playing at regionals Geo is a lock for this list. He is the smoothest looking thrower in the region. He has range, athleticism, height, and sportsmanship. He commanded the Stony Brook team playing almost every point at sectionals until he physically couldn’t run because of cramps.

Honorable mentions

Danny Manger #1 (Uconn)
Carson Fitzner #2 (Uconn)
Masayuki Nagase #1 (Yale)
Bobby Elston (Central Connecticut State)
Alex Baroody #0 (Princeton)
#7 (Cornell)
Luke Smith (Bing)

FOTY

Chris “Iggy” Iglesias #1 (Rutgers) - If you’ve ever matched up against him you know why. He will outrun you, out jump you, and out match you on defense. After losing one of our top cutters he had big shoes to fill and he filled them. Get ready for 3 more years of this kid blowing up unders.

Honorable mentions

Gerard Bryson #9 (Rutgers)
Tyler Mackey #3 (Rutgers)
Dan Han #69 (Rutgers)
Gianluca Pagano #14 (Rutgers)
Chris McLaughlin #67 (Rutgers)

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Hey y’all,

I’m the Declan (Decklan) that Oscar mentioned before from Rutgers. Since I was injured, I didn’t play regionals but I’ll share what jumped out from when I did play.

All-Region:

Rutgers:

Chris “Cannon” McLaughlin #67: I mean his nickname is Cannon. Much has been said already, but he was the focal point of our offense and that was clearly recognized by the way everyone else played him. From what I saw he was one of the biggest and craftiest throwers this season. Should be First Team.

Isaac Duan #16: Short handler defender with large legs. This kid has been nuts as a defender, especially since his freshman year. He almost always takes the opposing team’s best handler and more often than not deletes them from the field of play. Those who have been guarded by him likely remember being frustrated in the handler space as he shuts them down with a straight face.

Cole Stevens #2: The dude just doesn’t stop running. Cole gets better on the second day of tournaments because he has an endless motor. He’s developed into a workhorse defender who is capable of burning you anywhere on the field on offense. Cole OP.

Chris “Iggy” Iglesias #1: Freshman, but very talented. He was a primary downfield cutter for us in the fall and took on a bigger role as injuries piled up around him. Tons of energy takes tough matchups on defense, and can commonly be seen roofing people in the endzone. For a freshman, he has also been very composed this year despite taking on such a big role. Certainly should be in the conversation for recognition.

Non- Rutgers:

Gonna just be the Metro-NY Section because that’s all I saw.
Jeremy Bernier, UConn #4: Only got to watch him play (not play against him). It seems like everyone else has said his name plenty, but I’ll just echo it.

Matt Johnson, Columbia #6: Biiiiig boi. Cannon warned me about him before we played Columbia and he was right. Of the teams I got to play this season, he was definitely the hardest cutter to match up against. Very good, physical player who knows the game.

Oscar Kohut, Columbia #2: Very agile. Had to guard him once; definitely not my matchup. His throws and Matt’s cutting made Columbia very dangerous.

Geo Zheng, Stony Brook: Very talented thrower with the ability to easily get what he wants in the handler space. I’ve seen him play almost every point of many games to the point of seriously risking injury. Stony didn’t play regionals but his physicality and throwing prowess should have him on the All-Region list easily.

Alex Baroody, Princeton #0: Somehow accidentally kicked this guy in the neck when we played them; Alex, if you’re reading this, I’m really sorry about that. Anyways, he’s a very composed and smooth handler. He’s got a ton of great throws that really seemed to elevate Princeton’s play and is worth a look for All-Region.

FOTY:

Rutgers:

Chris “Iggy” Iglesias, #1: Kid’s cracked. See above.

Honorable Mentions:

Tyler Mackey, #3: Great pulls and a very smooth thrower. Switched from our O line and made an impact, especially through windy conditions.

Gerard Bryson, #9: Westfield just breeds smooth frisbee players apparently. Very agile and good at finding dangerous space on offense.

Gianluca Pagano, #14: Played through some crazy ass chest injury. Mans thinks he’s Pat Bev on defense or something, but he is effective.

Dan Han, #69: Consistently improved offensively throughout the year and had some shining moments on D as well. Skillset is well-rounded for a freshman.

Chris “Cannon” McLaughlin, #67: He made me put this here. He’s technically a freshman eligibility-wise, but he old af, don’t vote for him.

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Is there a form that we can fill out to vote for our nominations?

This past season was my rookie season playing for Binghamton and I would like to make some All-Regional shoutouts.

Binghamton Players for All-Region:

#1 Aaron Maymin : Was Binghamton’s senior captain and played almost every point. Ran our offense in both the handler and cutter space as well as in our dominator. Was able to make plays on both sides of the ball with incredible layouts and throws.

#18 Adam Cohen: Played on the D-Line but crossed over a lot. Had an incredible full-extension layout Callahan against Yale for the first point of the game. As well as a full-extension layout goal to force half against NYU. Was the heart of our defensive unit and thrived in the cutter space.

#14 Drew Hollahan: Played on the O-Line but crossed over on many points. Skied numerous people in all 4 games. Played deep in our zone shutting down the deep space as well as scoring on many hucks in the deep space on offense. An all around solid player with speed, hops, agility, and throws.

#23 Luke Smith: The definition of a hybrid player. Worked in both the cutter and handler space. Extremely polished player with high game IQ and always seems to be in the right spot on the field.

Non-Binghamton Players for All-Region:
#4 Jeremy Bernier (UConn): Should be the POTY. Had the honor to match up against him at a previous tournament. Extremely talented handler and it showed this tournament.

#20 Ben Goldman (Cornell): Extremely quick. Had all the throws and always open upline.

Freshman of the Year:
#40 James Pardo (Bing): We call him “nothing flashy” for a reason. Extremely polished and worked in both the handler and cutter space. Consistently gets open and hits under. Nothing flashy - except for his multiple chest high layouts, skies, and D’s. Often, he is everything but nothing flashy. Will read handlers perfectly and intercept throws. Has all the throws in the book. Not afraid to put his body on the line and layout. Stepped up big time during regionals.

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Hey all, this is KLai, just a sideline fan for Columbia. Wanted to give huge shoutout to these players:

Chris “Cannon” McLaughlin #67 (Rutgers): This guy is ridiculous. Crazy throws, crazy athletic, crazy fast, and clear focal point of Rutger’s offense. Need I say more?

Jeremy Bernier #4 (UConn): One of the most complete players I have seen. Hits all the throws he wants, can get open at any time, and a leader for UConn’s offense. Crazy stamina too as he played consistently at a high level without taking any breaks.

Antonio Brewer #7 (NYU): Hat’s off to Antonio. An incredibly athletic cutter that’ll burn your guy deep or just sky the pants off of you. From what I’ve seen, a big part of NYUs offense, as he is a reliable cutter that’ll get open anywhere. Also, hands down best celebrations in the Metro East.

Matt Johnson #6 (Columbia): A dynamic cutter that can get open on unders or deeps, has some nasty lefty throws, and don’t even think about testing him deep on defense. I think this thread has said everything I wanted to say, but also wanted to highlight how much of a mentor figure he was for the younger players on Columbia, teaching them about cutting timing, spacing, defensive principles… everything you would want in a mentor

Oscar Kohut, Columbia #2: Oscar is a warrior and bleeds Columbia Ultimate. His throws are nuts, his cutting is nuts, he catches everything in his area code (maybe in the neighboring area code too), and plays very aggressive defense. Another mentor figure on Columbia that a lot of the younger players look up to and respect and will play through any hardship to will Columbia to wins.

Thomas Baker, Columbia #69: Gotta give him some love. Extremely spirited, super hardworking on the field, and just an incredible cutter that will go up to secure hucks or grind unders all day. He is also a fighter on defense, contesting resets against handlers and swatting away the disc on cutters.

Miles Savitz, Columbia #10: Incredible defender, especially on handlers… like he will make your best player work 2x, 3x, 10x as hard just to get open for one reset pass or one small gainer. Hardworker on and off the field as he can cut or handle at a high level for multiple points at a time on the field and cares for all aspects of the team off the field.

Freshman Award (mainly my guys):

Wyatt Harte, Columbia #13: This guys is only a freshman but he stepped into an o-line/u-line handler role like it was nothing. His throws are fire and when he’s feeling himself, they will zip through your cup, zone, or any other tight window like it is nothing. Incredible sideline presence as well.

Daniel Esler, Columbia: Didn’t get to play at regionals because of COVID, but during the season, a huge contributor on the D-line, both defensively and offensively. Defensively, will shut down anyone you put him on. Offensively, I have never seen a freshman with so much poise and calm when the disc is in his hand… he will sit back and pick a defense apart, no matter if it is person or zone defense.

Davith Chan, Cornell #31: Learned he was a freshman in this thread. Holy shit, he is crazy explosive.

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Hi everyone! This is Jack Waxman (#4) from Cornell. First, I just want to thank you all for an amazing season of ultimate. I had the best time getting to play with you all!

Cornell:

All-Coach: Justin Pierce aka Nilla (Cornell)

Nilla joined our coaching team this year, and we were so fortunate that he did. He understands ultimate at an incredibly high level and is fantastic at communicating with players, sharing his knowledge in a clear, digestible way. Nilla also has a really strong presence on the sideline, in the huddle, and on the line. My teammates and I looked to Nilla for confidence, encouragement, and inspiration. He delivered every time. I feel so fortunate to have had the opportunity to play for Nilla. I also want to highlight Tanner Yuhas, whose coaching provided a whole extra element to the team. We are in great hands next year with Tanner.

All-Region:

Ben Goldman #20 (Cornell): Ben is an incredible ultimate frisbee player. First, he understands the game at a really high level and, like Nilla, is able to communicate this knowledge to teammates clearly. A great example of this is when Columbia (at Regionals) threw force-middle on us. Within a few throws, Ben had already recognized the look and communicated it with his teammates. Second, Ben has all the throws in the book. His hucks are insane, his break throws are always there, and his hammer and scoober are reliable and effective. Third, Ben is very athletic, making him difficult to guard. Cornell is a much different (and much better!) team with Ben Goldman.

Sam Hinson #7 (Cornell): I have felt so fortunate to play with Sam these past 3 years. He is one of the fastest players in the region and nearly impossible to guard, especially when he is following his throws upline on the open side. In dominator sets and in the handler space, Sam has consistently won his match-ups. Sam is also a dedicated system player who runs our systems the right way. He trusts his resets because he knows he will hit them. When the offense is not working too well, Sam has consistently brought us back through his successful commitment to our systems.

Eliot Hare #18 (Cornell): Eliot is a total beast on the field. He was a trusted leader of the D-line this semester and he delivered. He laid out for dozens of discs, and our senior highlight video is littered with dirty bids from Eliot. He just understands what the offense wants and he gets to that spot and he makes a play on the disc. Eliot opened up the field for our D-line with his 70-yard flick and backhand hucks. He is just a total treat to watch and play with.

All-Freshman: Davith Chan #31 (Cornell): Davith has been an absolute pleasure to play with. He is one of the quickest players I have ever played with. He can change direction in a instant, and it is really difficult to keep up with him. Davith often played the most points at tournaments, on our O-line and sometimes our D-line. I can’t wait to see him improve next year and dominate even more.

Non-Cornell:

Jeremy Bernier (UConn): In the finals at Regionals, Jeremy was a major force for UConn. Our team struggled to cover his hammers. He commanded the field with these (and other throws). He was also hard to guard in the handler space — with a really quick first step and great change of direction. I am definitely looking forward to the opportunity to guard Jeremy again. Congrats on a great season!

Hillel Rosenheim (Bing): Hillel was unfortunately injured this season, so he wasn’t able to play. I wanted to include him because he played so well in the fall against Cornell at Sectionals. He has all of the throws in the book, great decision-making, and can get the disc in the reset space on command. He also has great spirit and makes playing Bing an even better experience. It has been a pleasure getting to play with Hillel in our Western NY section. Wishing him a healthy and quick recovery and looking forward to playing with him soon!

Thank you again for an amazing season of ultimate. For all the seniors, congrats on a great college ultimate career. For all the non-seniors, see you in the fall!

Love your Buds,

Jack

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RIT alum here. Just want to shout out a few RIT seniors that tore it up this year.

Anthony (Jimmy Neutron) Fitzpatrick- Came to RIT having never thrown a frisbee. Leaving RIT with the best bidding form in all of D1 college ultimate. Great defender and probably knows your offense better than you know your offense.

Peter (Don’t take candy from strangers) Carter- Came to RIT with knives for hands. Leaving RIT with glue on his hands. Guy is always open and just a super reliable cutter.

Ryan Kelly- Huge presence on the sideline. Played great against Yale at regionals.

Hi its Luke Smith #23 on Binghamton.

All - Region shoutouts
#4 Uconn - Jeremy Bernier - POTY watched this kid play out of his mind in the metro east final. Carried the offense.

#4 Cornell - Jack Waxman: I love this kid I don’t know if he knows who I am but he might be my favorite player in the region not just for his skill but he plays with some of the best spirit I have ever seen. Huge shoutout for that. But also see you going every other in the zone o and working it through the cutter space and getting what you want. I think we played against each-other in HS once or twice you surely have gotten way better. Excited to keep playing you and cornell.

#1 Bing - Aaron Maymin: This kid is a beast. I have been playing with him since high school and it has been an absolute pleasure to watch him develop year after year into the incredible player and captain he is today. I love you aaron, I have been telling you since day 1 you deserve a first team all region award. Your hard work is something we all look up to and it shows on the field how talented you are. If you have ever seen Aaron play you know whats up.

Freshmen All - Region
#1 Rutgers - Chris Iglesias
#40 Binghamton - James Pardo
Micah Derringer Yale (if this kid is a freshmen)

This is Matt Johnson on Columbia.

I’ve only had one year in the Metro East after spending undergrad up in New England but these are just some players I have been very impressed with in the few games I’ve played and deserve an extra shout for All-Region

Oscar Kohut #2 Columbia: It wouldn’t be incorrect to say that Oscar is the reason I played this spring. His fire for ultimate combined with his skill and leadership were what gave me the push I needed to get back into ultimate after thinking that I might start winding down my playing days and for that I am eternally grateful. I am also eternally grateful for his deep hucks which made my job easy and his timely lay out D’s in the under space. Man is versatile, surgical, and plays 6 inches bigger than he is. A more deserving player of All-Region and even POTY you couldn’t find.

Bobby Elston #23 CCSU: I terms of pure ability, I think there is maybe one or two people in the region that has more than Bobby. He is deceptively quick for his size, has ups for days, and throws that will make you chef’s kiss. If you put him on any of the bracket day teams, they would instantly become the favorite in my head and might even win a couple games at nationals.

Chis McLaughlin #67 Rutgers: Man is an incredibly talented thrower, a bowling ball up line and as been absolutely saucing on people at Empire practice these days so he deserves a shout.

Jeremy Bernier #4 UConn: Enough has been said. Read all the comments above.

There were a bunch of Cornell players who were having a day against Columbia in the semis and generally making my life hell in that game so Ben Goldman #20, Tomer Poole-Dayan #13, and Jack Waxman #4, all of whom have been mentioned above, have my vote as well for All-Region First Team.

Also shout out to #8 on Cornell (I don’t know his name) who played really good physical defense all game and was really spirited in discussion. I was impressed and would throw his name in the hat for second team.

I also have an all freshman nomination.

Wyatt Harte #13 Columbia: As has been mentioned, he’s a freshman who handles on our O-line which already speaks to a level of maturity and ability that I think is wildly impressive. I didn’t truly appreciate how valuable he was to this team until we were missing him on Saturday at regionals and then got him back Sunday. The difference it made was unbelievable and to have such an impact as a freshman deserves recognition. Man will be on a couple All-Region teams by the end of his career.

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This is Duncan Lamont #34 from NYU.

If coach of the year is a thing, I have to vote for Princeton’s coach. Don’t know their name, but Princeton had such insane improvement from Fall to Spring. Really incredible.

Player of the year has to go to Uconn #4 or this is all rigged.

And I’d like to put in a good word for Antonio Brewer #7 and Eric Zhang #10 who are both on NYU with me. Both are incredible players and have been consistent for us all year long. Both played well on both sides of the disc and could get open whenever they wanted.

AARON MAYMIN FOR CALLAHAN
AND FIRST TEAM ALL REGION

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Sick vid Aaron! Wanna spread the Callahan love and send over that Columbia v Bing footage from No Sleep?? :wink: