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High Tide 2020 Info & Team Deals

High Tide 2020 Info & Team Deals

HIGH TIDE TEAM DEALS

High Tide Gear

These great deals are available to registered teams thinking about High Tide specific jerseys. Our design team will work with you to develop a design that combines your team vibe with the High Tide theme or includes the 2020 High Tide logo in the design (on the sleeve, for example). Minimum quantity 12.

  • $15 tee with 2-color front print [must be High Tide themed]
  • $25 white spot sub jersey (front and back print) 
  • $49 full sublimated GreenLine jersey or tank
  • $59 fully sublimated GreenLine sun hoodie

**All orders come with a free gift per item

Team Gear - Deals For Registered Teams

Registered for High Tide and looking for new team gear? Teams attending High Tide get an automatic 25% off team apparel or their Team Marketplace.

Make sure to email sales@savageultimate.com to get your High Tide gear started. 

Introduction to the Biggest Spring Break Tourney:

High Tide Ultimate, hosted in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, attracts over 200 teams each year to South Carolina to compete in a Monday hat tournament and a full three-day unsanctioned tournament over the course of the rest of the week. Get registered! 

The tournament is a day of pool play, a day of mixed up pool play, and a day bracket play. As one of the biggest tournaments you can attend, High Tide gives you the opportunity to match up against teams you’d normally never encounter. 

The hat tournament, Powered by Savage, is the greatest way to spend your Monday; meeting new Ultimate friends. The registration fee gets you 3-6 games of fun ultimate, field snacks and water, and a High Tide hat tournament t-shirt. Of course, the real win isn’t the t-shirt, but the friends you make along the way. 

Need more convincing? We’re happy to help. Not only do you get three to four days of low-stakes, high-fun ultimate frisbee, an entire week at a beach in March, and hours of bonding time with your team, but the event also comes with deals for attractions all over Myrtle Beach. When you rent your home for the week through Myrtle Beach Tours, who partners with High Tide, you’ll get a wristband that will qualify you for discounts all over Myrtle Beach and entry into the team party, cookout, swag trade night, and more!

If your team is a regular High Tide attendee and you can’t wait to spread the good news, High Tide is offering a new team referral discount. Connect with the schools in your region, your friend’s team, or any random team you run into at a tournament this fall and do your best smooth talkin’ to get them to High Tide 2020! If they mention that you referred them, you get $200 off your bid fee next year. 

But your memories of High Tide can be a little more tangible than discounts and tans. Savage is the official sponsor of High Tide, and so we design unique and diverse High Tide gear each year to sell at the complex. This year’s theme — 2020 High Tide Poolside — could feature designs ranging from a classy 1920s theme to colorful pool gear.

We can’t wait to see you in Myrtle Beach!

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Order Custom Jerseys from Savage

Order Custom Jerseys from Savage

Ordering new jerseys for your team can be an intimidating prospect, especially if you’ve never done it before. These are the basics for ordering jerseys and gear at Savage. What to Send Us; Custom Options; Pricing; Timelines; Team Marketplace.

 

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Go Green Save Green

Go Green Save Green

Go Green Save Green

Fall Deals

$10 OFF - Bookends Package

$20 OFF - Callahan Package

$30 OFF - Universe Package

Ask for additional ways to save 

Offer expires Oct 31, 2019

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American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) & Savage Sign A Three Year Deal

American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) & Savage Sign A Three Year Deal

AUDL Replica Jerseys and Fan Jerseys Are Now Available In Our Store

In a new professional clothing brand agreement, Savage Apparel Company will become the official jerseys, shorts, and sideline apparel of the American Ultimate Disc League, as well as the Apparel Merchandise Partner of the AUDL, in a three-year deal for the 2020-2022 seasons. 

“As a conscientious league built looking towards the future, an area of particular focus for us is to improve our environmental footprint wherever possible,” said AUDL Commissioner Steve Hall. “For Championship Weekend we are committing to the 50k Tree Planting Challenge, and so when Savage suggested that we take a look at their GreenLine jerseys, we thought it was a perfect marriage of timing and initiative.”

A new generation of activewear made from 100 percent recycled bottles, the GreenLine is an exclusive jersey series made by the Savage Apparel Company to help address the growing issue of climate change. Savage worked with a nearby partner mill to create a proprietary fabric specifically for our customers’ unique needs. The kit is lightweight, sweat-wicking, antimicrobial, comfortable, and sublimation-friendly — plus it’s rated UPF 50+, the highest level of UV protection you can get from clothing. You won’t find this fabric anywhere else.

"We've been working on perfecting this new fabric for the past year and a half, and we're so excited to finally get it out there," says Savage founder Todd Curran. "Partnering with the AUDL is an incredible way to introduce more people to the Greenline, to show people how great this fabric feels, and hopefully get players hooked on a much more sustainable standard in their uniforms."

The AUDL and Savage will work in conjunction to offer team jersey replicas available for consumer purchase in the AUDL Store beginning in 2020.

Philadelphia based Maestroe Sports & Entertainment brokered the deal.

About Savage Ultimate Company 

Savage Apparel Co. was founded by Todd Curran in Charleston, S.C. in 2009. Now based in Richmond, Va., the company has grown to do all production in-house, from design and printing to manufacturing. Savage is committed to transitioning all of its products to the Greenline fabric in the coming months. Find out more at savageultimate.com
 

About The American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL)

The American Ultimate Disc League (AUDL) was founded in 2012 and is the largest professional ultimate league in the world. It strives to maintain the sport’s rich history, and its 21 teams embody the robust spirit of ultimate's players, fans, and community alike. The league's mission is to increase the visibility of one of North America’s fastest growing participation sports by creating fun, family friendly events that showcase the sport being played at its highest level. Visit http://theaudl.com

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Ultimate talk with Vault's Neeley Brothers

Ultimate talk with Vault's Neeley Brothers
Photo by Steve Helvin

 

When it comes to ultimate-playing siblings, the Neeley Brothers are some of the best-known names in the game. Matthew and Jonathan helped start and now play for Vault (whose Team Marketplace just wrapped up), and they previously played on the DC Breeze. Jonathan also helped start Virginia Squires back in the day and has played with Truck Stop for years. You've probably also read his words in Skyd Magazine and Ultiworld. Savage Sales Jedi Austin Bartenstein asked the brothers a few more than seven questions. Here's what they had to say.

 

Savage: What are your favorite ultimate snacks?

MN: I love cured meats. If I have any say in the team snack cooler, there will always be some prosciutto or salami in there.

JM: I’m not a huge snacker. Give me a full meal. To that end, I like getting a can lentil soup and an avocado. Easy way to stay full on the cheap. Frozen fruit is also fantastic when it’s hot.

Savage: What skill have you practiced most in frisbee?

MN: This may be silly, but probably just talking. On the field communication, sideline help, chair heckling. I've been told I can be loud effectively, and I don't shy away from projecting my voice.

JN: Probably throwing.

Savage: Can you tell us about the most meaningful moment in your respective ultimate careers?

MN: I'm not sure if anything tops winning a YCC tournament back in 2009 with Seattle. Taking a gold medal (or crappy piece of plastic) home, and having your name in the UPA Archives is pretty sweet. I've also won the Moscow Indoor Tournament twice in my career, which not a ton of people can say that they have done.

JN: That’s a really hard one—the game has been so good to me! There were a few years where I helped run clinics in Panama for a 2-week stretch in January, and the time when we were starting up, a woman came up to me beaming, talking about how what she had learned the previous year had been paying off ever since and how it had made playing so much more fun for her. Seeing her gain that confidence meant a whole lot. On the field, making Nationals my last year at Virginia and semis my last year on Truck are two big ones.

Savage: Ultimate seems to be at an important crossroads right now. What direction do you expect it to go, and what would you hope for ultimate's future?

JN: I used to think the ultimate world was this thing I could fully grasp—like as long as I kept an eye on things and talked to lots of people, I could understand all of its angles. These days, it’s clear to me how ridiculous that thought has always been. I think frisbee will keep going in all kinds of ways for all kinds of people, and there’s only a big narrative to the extent that people imagine one. I recently played in a local beach league where $5 got you two games and lunch afterward. And the ocean was the sideline.  

I guess what I’m saying is that one place my mind goes here is what might essentially be described as ultimate "going corporate," and how at first pass I don’t love that notion. But that isn't a new phenomenon—Jose Cuervo was sponsoring tournaments in the '90s. And on the personal level, my entire career has happened in the context of people wanting to take ultimate beyond just being a game and being this thing to consume. I was into 5 Ultimate stretchy shorts in college, and pro ultimate gave me some of my fondest memories. And yet I still think of the frisbee world as pretty welcoming and quirky and all that. 

I guess I just hope ultimate continues to be fun, becomes more welcoming for more people, and does for more people what it has done for me, which is serve as a forum for stopping to think about how sports and community and personal stake and responsibility all overlap.

MN: I don't know if I'm the one to call all the shots here, but there was a club player coalition meeting in DC where we discussed the ultimate community and making things more accessible and accepting for everyone. Things like that certainly need to keep happening, and I believe we as players are going in the right direction.

I guess what I'll say is that in 2011 we went to college sectionals for a bid fee of $150 and it was hosted by a dude that was quite involved in the ultimate community. The fields were good, the weather was fantastic, there was a keg on site and a party in Missoula that night with food and beer provided. This coming season, our club sectionals bid fee is $600 and it's being ran by a for-profit company. I would appreciate an explanation for this, cuz it just ain't right.

Savage: You both have ties to Seattle and Virginia/DC ultimate. Do you have any observations about how those ultimate communities compare?

MN: I'll start by saying that both communities are really awesome, and there are a lot of very cool people involved in both cities. One thing I've noticed is that in Seattle, there seem to be more folks that are ALL IN on frisbee. Like, at every skill level, there are people that go to every dang tournament they can. Like 35 tournaments a year. I don't know if I just don't see as much of that in DC, so that could just be a perception. People in Seattle also play a ton of goaltimate. I miss goaltimate. 

I think the DC community is more team-oriented. There are a number of teams that do a lot within their own team structure. Maybe that's just me getting older and less social though, because I know things are going on, but half the time I would prefer sitting at home with the pup!

JN: I agree with Matthew: they’re both great places to play ultimate. I think he’s onto something about Seattle having more people who are straight-up ultimate-obsessed, which I think comes from the overall culture just being different. Here in DC, there’s just a stronger magnet that pulls people into the mainstream, whereas in the Northwest, I think it’s just more common to have people who really march to the beat of their own drum, and so you naturally have ultimate players who take more unique paths. And I think all of that has led to Seattle being an innovator with ultimate, from on-field stuff to using the sport to make cultural gains. There’s just a little more “what angle can I come at this sport from?” and more willingness to go all-in on that angle. That’s what I see, anyway.

Savage: Both of you guys have been playing for a long time. Any words of wisdom for other ultimate siblings out there?

MN: I feel like we have a rather unique situation, since we have lived on opposite sides of the country for the majority of our ultimate careers. I would say to take every chance you have to play with each other. If you aren't on the same team, or in the same city, get workouts in during holidays and go to pickup games together. Talk to each other about ultimate and life. It's the 21st century, so we're both blessed and cursed with the gift of communication!

JN: Yep to all of that. Even with the teammates you’re closest with, it’s rare that any of them don’t know you primarily as an ultimate player. That’s not the case with a sibling, which is something to relish. 

Savage: Any ultimate heroes or heroines?

MN: Hero: I find it hard to put ultimate players on a pedestal for idolization, but I definitely used to get pretty hyped about some of those mid-2000 Sockeye teams. Ryan Winkelmann comes to mind as a dude that worked hard, and was just really cool on and off the field. Jonathan and I got the chance to work with him at the camps out in Seattle, and he's a hilarious dude that is down to teach you a thing or two if you ask.

JN: Coming up in the game, I idolized Ben Wiggins pretty hard. I liked how good he was at throwing and how he talked about the game in a way that always seemed to say "I know the conventional wisdom says to do that, but have you thought about it like this?" I really like the way he thinks, at least publicly. 

Savage: What's the most memorable game you've witnessed or been a part of? Set the scene for us. 

MN: College Regionals 2013. We were playing UW (gross) in the last game of pool play. We had gone down 2-6 or something like that and I sort of just turned it on. Ended up getting involved in every point and playing one of the best games of my college career. Brought the score to 11-11 with us receiving, when one of my friends, Jeff Landrie, promptly turfed the centering pass off the pull. Naturally, UW punched it in for the break and promptly broke us again to win 13-11, but that game was darn fun. We then went on to lose to Oregon B in my last college game ever. Good times. 

JN: Easy. The 2009 Open final at Club Nationals, Chain vs. Revolver. This was my first Club Nationals, and seeing a team as dialed in as Chain was… I had just never seen that before. This was before Nationals happened in a stadium, so I was sitting on one of the front endzone line cones with some good friends who I had graduated from college with a few months prior, just talking frisbee and taking it all in. Our captain, Robert Runner, was playing big minutes for Chain, and seeing him dominate these top players with the exact same throws and moves and attitude that he had spent the last four years dominating us with at practice… that added this element of pride to it. The whole thing felt like this welcome to a new level of ultimate for me. I don’t think I’m painting a great picture here, but it all still glows in my head.

Savage: Favorite Neeley family memory?

JN: So tough! The time my dad saw us pretending to smoke cigars and then went to the store and came back with a pack of cigarettes and told us we had to smoke them because if you kids want to do that crap, why don’t you really do it… and then both of us crying and apologizing and seeing how unvirtuous we had been… that was pretty good.

Savage: Between the two of you, what's the tie-dye shirt count? Any favorites and the story behind them?

MN: I think I have 5 sitting in my drawers, with the best one being the Lithuanian Grateful Dead basketball shirt. That one is top-notch and gets a lot of shout outs. Just this past AUDL season the guy making my sandwich at Wawa geeked out over it, and we had a nice conversation about the Dead. Always cool when strangers connect over things like that.

JN: Off the top of my head, I’m counting 6, so 11 between us. Woulda expected a little higher. No great stories with mine, but I did only pay $.05 for my favorite one. Bought it right before spring break my junior year. It’s served me well ever since.

Savage: Who is more likely to start a jam band when he hits 40? What's the band name?

MN: I have to imagine that's Jonathan. He's been actively learning to play guitar. I'll definitely be ready to sell grilled cheeses and cooler beers in the lot when tour kicks up though!

JN: That’s nice of you to say, but that project has been on hold for a while. But Vault is pretty much a jam band if you're willing to look at it that way. We helped start that last December. 

Savage: Who are your favorite writers and why?

MN: Jeff Sullivan from fangraphs is one of my favorite internet writers. As a big baseball fan, and Mariners fan, he helped my friends and I cope with what was, and still is Mariners baseball. He's pretty witty, and did a good job of keeping things in perspective when dealing with a team that hasn't made the playoffs since 2001. He's moved onto better things, like writing about interesting teams and players, but he still has our hearts.

JN: There's a thinker named Eckhart Tolle blew my worldview open two summers ago, and I revisit hist stuff pretty frequently, especially a book called The Power of Now. Along those lines, I also like Thich Nhat Hanh and Alan Watts a whole lot. I just got introduced to Neil Gaiman and have had a hard time putting his books down. I like a lot of New Yorker writers — Malcom Gladwell, Jia Tolentino, and Rachel Aviv all come to mind. My favorites tend to evolve, and I'm sort of a slow book reader so I don't always feel like I have time to get into a critical mass of a single person's work. But the Gaiman thing is showing me a little about how cool that can be.

Savage: This one's for Jonathan. What's the best biking city you've been to? What can you tell us about bike lanes? Are bike lanes even important?

JN: DC is pretty great, and people here should remember that. Nationally, we’re right behind Portland in terms of number of people riding, and we’re up there on miles of bike lanes, both of which make riding safer and more fun. Of other places I’ve been and have tried to bike, I had a lot of fun in New Orleans, and they’re building a ton of new lanes there. And Seattle is really great too—our dad still lives there and I work for a company that has an office there, so I go out once or twice a year, and I’ve done some bike commuting while there. What’s crazy is that in all of those places, riding your bike can still be pretty unsafe on the whole. And even in the places where a certain bike lane or street feels super safe, that’s just a function of where in town you are. If it’s a white area near the city center, you can probably ride pretty safely and comfortably. If you’re in a community of color that was probably redlined and still being starved for resources, the roads tend to be super dangerous for everyone. Luckily there are some smart people in all sectors who are talking about this problem more.

To sum all this up, though, what I really know is this: parking is going to kill us all. We’ve got to walk back this whole “storing my 2-ton hunk of personal property in the street is my God-given right” thing. Quit it with the parking, everyone. And build the freaking bike lanes.

 

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Summer Tank Sale

Summer Tank Sale
SALE EXTENDED!!

Suns out guns out. For those of you that can't stand sleeves, do we have a deal for you! Teams can take advantage of the Summer Tank Sale now through July 4th Aug 31st!!!

Fully Sublimated Tank Top - $35

Full Sub/Spot Sub White Reversible Tank - $45

Full Sub Reversible Tank Top - $55

Minimum quantity of 10

Get your team order started today by emailing sales@savageultimate.com.

 

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WestCoast Women's Pro Ultimate takes off running

WestCoast Women's Pro Ultimate takes off running

Professional women's ultimate frisbee has officially arrived in Southern California with WestCoast Women's Pro Ultimate, and Savage is proud to be outfitting the Los Angeles 99s and San Diego Wolfpack as they kick off their inaugural season. Check out their official collection of ultimate frisbee jerseys and shorts in their team shop, and read our Q&A with the 99s' Felicia Yang below.

Savage: Tell us about your background in ultimate.

Felicia Yang: I started playing intramurals as a freshman at USC. My very first tournament was Sean Ryan Memorial in Santa Cruz. I had a terrible time and vowed that this tournament would be my last. The next week practice rolled around and I needed a break from schoolwork, so I sucked it up and went back. I ended up finding ultimate to be a fun way to get exercise, relieve stress, meet new people and take a mental break from the college grind. It took some time after college to commit to the club scene, but now I'm hooked and ultimate is a huge part of my life.

Los Angeles 99s ultimate frisbee women's

Savage: What's the part you played in bringing WestCoast Women's Pro Ultimate to life? 

FY: I was very disappointed to learn about the attempt for a similar event in 2018 that didn't come to fruition. I believed that the Aviators and Growlers ownership had genuine intentions of creating opportunities for women to play and be seen, and needed a hand in bringing those intentions to life. They didn't get the help they needed last year, and I saw this as an opportunity to take action and contribute my logistical organization skills to promote change. I believe that if I care enough about something—visibility and opportunity for women in ultimate in this case—then I need to put forth my best effort to make something happen. Otherwise, I don't have a right to complain that it doesn't exist. 

Savage: Who are some other key players we should know about? 

FY: Katie Killebrew is a long-standing leader in the ultimate community. I first met her while playing at USC and she was one of the most welcoming, inclusive, energetically loud people around. She's dedicated much of her time toward coaching and captaining women's ultimate in Los Angeles over the last decade. She's one of the people who I constantly see taking action to contribute to a cause that she cares about, and I admire her dedication.

Many of the other women on 99s and Wolfpack have also dedicated time toward coaching and captaining. This includes Jenny Norris, Lizzy Cowan, Sheila Robles, Ali Webster, Amy Lee, Linda Venema, Lisa Shipek, Sheliemae Reyes, Simrit Khalsa, Stacy Tran, Allison Brown and Annie Kean. How amazing is it to see how much these women care about the community and what they're willing to give back. I know I missed people too, so apologies for that.

Savage: Why do you think WestCoast Women's Ultimate is important? 

FY: There's been so much momentum behind empowering women in our society recently. As an engineer in a male-dominated aerospace industry, showing that women belong in sports is just as important as demonstrating that women are equally capable in an academic, professional, and engineering setting. Visibility of diverse people in all of these fields is imperative in continuing to push for more equity in our society. This pro series is just one step in pushing toward a future society that is more inclusive and provides equal opportunities to a broader range of people. Women in other sports have been amazing role models in paving a path toward better representation, from Venus Williams in women's tennis, Ronda Rousey in MMA, the 99ers in women's soccer, and Becky Hammon in men's and women's basketball.

Savage: Tell us about the educational component of WestCoast Women's Pro Ultimate.

FY: The most important thing right now is shifting the mindset around women's sports and showing everyone that they are just as entertaining and impressive to watch as men's sports given the same level of resources and development. When we aim high and create an excellent product, then we are more visible to different populations including children. This will give people something to strive for, and will shape the future of ultimate and of women's sports.

Savage: How do you hope this will evolve?

FY: I hope that professional ultimate can become sustainable in general.  How amazing would it be to have resources and income to offset the cost of playing at high levels? The benefit of professional leagues is to grow ultimate and make it more accessible for people to watch and play, but growth comes with some downsides that I think the community needs to be wary of. Visibility is great for growth and equity, and I hope the ultimate community can maintain its closeness as it becomes self-sustainable.

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Heading to Chicago Sandblast? Here's what you need to know about the beach ultimate tournament

Heading to Chicago Sandblast? Here's what you need to know about the beach ultimate tournament

Ultimate Chicago Sandblast is one of America's premier beach ultimate tournaments, and Savage is proud to be the event's new apparel partner. Scheduled for July 13-14 on beautiful Montrose Beach overlooking the Chicago skyline, this event brings together more than 1000 players, volunteers, and spectators. We talked with Ultimate Chicago Sandblast director Adam Levy about what makes this awesome event so unique.

Headed to Sandblast? Be sure to order your tournament jerseys by May 24 to make sure you get 'em in time for the event.

Savage: Tell us a bit about Sandblast. What sets this tournament apart from others out there?

Adam Levy: Ultimate Chicago Sandblast is hosting its 19th edition in 2019 and takes pride in evolving year after year with feedback and focus on the players. Our event features three divisions: Elite for top teams focused on play, Spirit of the Game focused on shenanigans, and Game as the best of both. Our event has the blessing and curse of space limitations which allows our event to focus on how to maximize value for our player participants through an excellent collection of generous partners that make up our sponsor village. Players have enjoyed Chipotle burritos and Potbelly sandwiches for lunch; BodyArmor, Monster Energy, Vita Coco, BAI and other beverages; KIND Snacks, CLIF Bar, Krave Jerky and other snack providers along with so much more. The party does not stop on the beach as we take great pride in our Saturday night celebrations at premier City of Chicago venues so our players, both near and far, can enjoy a true perspective of the Windy City.

Savage: How has the tournament evolved since the early days? 

Adam Levy: Our sponsor village brings great value and festivities year after year. We have included keepsake items including backpacks, lunch bags, sport towels, koozies and sunglasses as relevant and valuable memories to enjoy long after leaving the beach. In 2018, we were excited to have a team photo backdrop to help bring teams into one central location while capturing the spirit of our great event as a personalized keepsake for the team to enjoy. In addition to driving value for our players, we are also excited to give back! Over the past few years, we have partnered with Chicago-based not-for-profit Imerman Angels that provides free global one-on-one mentorship for cancer fighters, survivors and caregivers.  

Savage: Is there anything new or different happening this year? 

Adam Levy: We are always looking to raise the bar and are excited to partner with Great Lakes Ultimate Events (GLUE) to lead our gameday operations to ensure a smooth and successful experience for our teams and players. We have three new relationships with Savage Apparel Company, CLIF Bar and Joybol by Kellogg’s that will offer quality product sampling AND unique engagement experiences on the beach. We are most excited about the innovation and fresh perspective that Savage brings to our event as already demonstrated through the 2019 logo design. In addition to the quality merchandise, they have some great ideas and surprises to build engagement and even more memories for our teams.

Savage: What can players expect of the parties?

Adam Levy: We used to organize a Friday night welcome party or coordinate schedules with the AUDL’s Chicago Wildfire, but we found that teams have preferred to take advantage of downtown Chicago. Teams have hosted their own spirit and SWAG design parties or just getting out on the town. The best Saturday night events have been in historical Wrigleyville outside the home of the Chicago Cubs, Wrigley Field. We are focused on getting us back there where we have taken over huge venues with bag board/cornhole tournaments, photo booth activations, karaoke rooms and great tunes to get down and back up again. Our past generous partners have included Pabst Blue Ribbon, Goose Island, Seattle Cider Company with special thanks to Tito’s Homemade Vodka for their product support and an equally generous financial donation to our not-for-profit partner, Imerman Angels. 

Savage: Any tips for folks who are coming to the tournament from out of town? 

Adam Levy: There are many great beach ultimate events available to players, but beyond everything you have read above, what sets us apart is the amazing location as the city of Chicago and is our focus on quality over quantity. Our home of Montrose Beach on the north side of Chicago limits us to just 68 teams which is a great problem to have as we can focus on driving player value without having to balance constant recruiting of teams to expand the field. Another focus of our event is providing everything a player could need on the beach…team/player bags with goodies and giveaways, breakfast, lunch, snacks, drinks, athletic trainers and so much more! Is it July 13th yet?

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