adjusts headset Are we live? Ugh, fine.
Feast or Fired, The First Card is Dropped 🎪
Three competitors, 21 holes of Trinity's finest torture devices, and a tag system that just auto-corrected itself into championship belts. Welcome to the inaugural Wednesday night supercard where The Woods at Trinity serves as both playground and executioner. The Feast or Fired scramble is officially in the books, and apparently we're calling this "establishing the hierarchy" instead of "watching people throw plastic at metal while questioning their life choices." Same difference.
Somebody Call an Exorcist for the Competition 👻
Christopher Goff didn't just win MA1—he conducted a masterclass in demoralization. Wire-to-wire dominance with a -8 that registered 953 on the PDGA Live tracker, a cool 65 points above his player rating. The man parked hole 10's 59-foot Circle 2 death putt like he was ordering coffee, then backed it up with a bogey-free back nine that had the rest of the card calculating their escape routes. Front nine? Also his. When you're throwing 987-rated golf on a course that eats confidence for breakfast, you've officially entered "possession by the chains" territory.
The Explorer Maps Out Victory, Takes the Scenic Route 🗺️
Meanwhile in MA3, Erick Zamarripa earned his League Explorer badge the hard way—by getting thoroughly lost in his own round before somehow stumbling into the Hollow Crown. A +4 that rated 832 might be 40 points below his usual standard, but in the twisted logic of AllIn reshuffle mode, struggling better than your competition still gets you the belt. Sometimes the scenic route includes ten bogeys and a three-putt, but hey, that's exploration for you.
Explorer Status Earned, But at What Cost 💸
The real tragedy played out in FA3 where McKenzie Zamarripa discovered that League Explorer achievements don't care about your score, only your suffering. Her +14 round rated 732 (which the PDGA stats generously called "developmental") featured ten bogeys or worse across the final ten holes. That's not a cold finish—that's cryogenic suspension. But she earned that explorer badge, proving that sometimes the map leads straight into the woods and leaves you there.
From Parked Putts to Death Struggles 🎯
The rating swings tell the whole story: Christopher's 65-point positive deviation versus Erick's 40-point face-plant, all on the same layout that played short-tee-to-long-pin for maximum chaos potential. One player found every chain while another found every tree, and somehow both walked away with championship hardware because this league decided "consistency" was overrated. The Woods at Trinity remains undefeated—three players entered, three players discovered new definitions of "character building."

The Grim Sabbath Claims Its First Victim ⚰️
The temperature drop wasn't just weather—Christopher Goff now carries the Grim Sabbath, that light-absorbing tag that supposedly casts twelve shadows and makes opponents question their preparation. Pool A's new #1 earned it the old-fashioned way: by throwing the round of the night while everyone else was still selling the impact of the first tee. Over in Pool B, Erick's Hollow Crown capture proves that even scenic routes can lead to thrones when the reshuffle gods smile upon your mediocrity. AllIn mode means nobody's safe, everybody's vulnerable, and next week's ladder match promises even more narrative whiplash.
The Season Arc Has Been Cast 🎬
Week 1's pilot episode just established our main characters: the possessed champion, the struggling explorer who stumbled into gold, and the league itself—which apparently thinks "extreme" means "make everyone uncomfortable with their own performance." Next Wednesday brings the Ladder Match segment, where climbers leapfrog stagnant veterans and the hierarchy gets another forced rewrite. Eight weeks of this, and we're already questioning the script. From the booth where rankings matter and absence still shows up in the cut, I'm Flippy, and I'll be your reluctant guide through whatever fresh chaos Trinity cooks up next.
Flippy's Hot Take