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Field Commander

Field Commander

Honors the player who most frequently scored better than the field average.

Uncommon 21 players
21 Players Earned
16 Different Leagues
Nov 2025 First Unlocked
19d ago Last Earned

Players Who Earned This

Showing 1–20 of 21
April 13, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts tracking knob The simulation has crunched the numbers for Pool B, and the resolution is unexpectedly sharp. Aaron Nakai secures the Field Commander title for Runaway Glide @ Creekside with a flawless 100% win rate. He achieved this tactical masterpiece by playing a single round, beating the field average by 2.9 strokes, and presumably fading into the VHS static before the algorithm could demand a sequel.

It’s the ultimate "Runaway" strategy: dominate the screen time, then exit stage left. Against a 918-rated field, Aaron posted a 169.3 score that left the rest of Pool B chasing a ghost. It’s technically "consistency above field average" if you define consistency as "never letting the field see you miss." The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf.

Your membership status is... checks Blockbuster database ...fully renewed for greatness. It’s a glorious, stat-padding anomaly that makes the rest of us look foolish for actually showing up every week. Why play a whole season when you can just cameo and win?

April 13, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

tape tracking hisses The simulation logs show a glorious anomaly in The Surge faction. Bryan Cook has secured the Field Commander title, proving that precision beats volume every time. While others played the long game, Bryan treated the Crimson Glide like a speedrun—efficient, brutal, and recorded on a format that’s slowly degrading in the rain.

The metrics are comically absolute: one round played, five strokes better than the field average. That’s a 100% success rate in the "above average" category. It’s the kind of dominance that usually requires a training montage, but here it’s just a single frame of perfection. The algorithm respects the brevity, even if the statisticians are crying over the sample size.

So, we salute our Commander, who led from the front for exactly one event and then presumably ascended to a higher plane of existence. You conquered the field with minimal footage. Does winning with just one appearance count as a dynasty, or just a really good highlight reel?

April 12, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

VHS tracking adjusts The simulation flags an anomaly in The Static Court. Usually, the Road Redemption narrative requires suffering through ten zones to prove legitimacy, but Kai Kim found a cheat code. They entered Thumb and Thumber @ The Fort, threw a single round that was 9.1 strokes better than the field average, and immediately claimed the top spot. Most players fight for survival; Kai fought for an afternoon and won the war.

Technically, a 100% win rate is perfection, even if the sample size is statistically terrifying. Beating a 938-rated field by nearly double digits isn't just luck; it's a dominance glitch in the matrix. The "Field Commander" award typically goes to the steady hand guiding the troops, but here it goes to the tactical airstrike that leveled the village in one pass. The simulation respects efficiency, I suppose.

So, we salute the Commander who led from the front for exactly one battle. The static clears, the tape ejects, and the record remains unblemished. If you dominate the arena for only one round, does that make you a legend or just a tourist?

April 11, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

tracking error The simulation has rendered its verdict on the Challengers pool. Mark Gordon has ascended to Field Commander status, proving that in The Sling Matrix, you don't need a trilogy—just one really good opening scene.

The archived footage shows Mark played exactly one round at Art Dye, yet he dominated the field average by 1.5 strokes. That’s a 100% win rate, which the algorithm interprets as "consistent dominance" rather than "showed up once and left." Your membership status is... checks Blockbuster database ...Elite.

It takes a special kind of cinematic confidence to command the field with a sample size of one. Most generals need an army; Mark just needed a tee time and a decent flick. Does holding a title for one round count as a dynasty or just a rental?

April 11, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

tracking error fuzz The tape is warping, but the signal remains clear. In this retro-futurist hellscape, Tongia Vakaafi has achieved digital apotheosis, seizing the Field Commander title in the Vanguard pool with terrifying precision.

While the rest of the league was buffering, Tongia was delivering a director's cut. With three dominant rounds and an average margin of 7.8 strokes over the field, they didn't just beat the simulation—they reprogrammed it. That 8.3-stroke masterpiece? That wasn't just a round; it was cinematic violence.

rewind sound Let's see that rating dominance again. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. Congrats on surviving the edit bay, Tongia. Does the winner get a late fee waived?

April 10, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts tracking knob The Jurassic simulation tape is finally playing clearly. The arena asked for a season-long struggle against rogue animatronics and shifting mandatories, but James McDaniel treated it like a highlight reel. He entered the Blockbuster tier of Pool A, dropped one flawless performance, and left the rest of the field arguing over shade zones while the credits rolled.

James claims the Field Commander title with stats that break the logic gates: one round, 100% win rate, and a 5.3-stroke margin over the field. That’s a "Dominant" rating in the system’s eyes. He didn't just survive the 872-rated competition at Bingham Creek; he fast-forwarded through the struggle to get to the end scene. When your average margin is better than the entire field's existence, the simulation has no choice but to bow down.

Grab your chrome dinosaur tag before the static takes it. Thanks to our sponsors for keeping the resort powered and the neon glowing. The simulation doesn't negotiate, but I'll complain about its narrative choices on your behalf. If you dominate the only round you play, are you a legend or just a very efficient renter?

April 10, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts tracking knob to clear the static The simulation has detected a statistical anomaly in the Jurassic Park Job data. Bergan Sillito has seized the Field Commander award with a ruthless efficiency that makes the T-Rex animatronic look lazy. With a 100% win rate from exactly one round played, Bergan treated the league like a rental returned before the late fees kicked in—showing up, beating the 872-rated field average by 1.3 strokes, and vanishing into the mist.

VHS glitch Most commanders endure a long campaign of attrition; Bergan is a tactical airstrike. The algorithm demands consistency, and apparently, showing up once and absolutely crushing it counts as "perfect consistency" in my database. You didn't just survive the arena; you speedran it. The sponsors are furious they didn't get more ad inventory out of you, but the chrome tag doesn't care about screen time.

You secured the bag tag dominance without the narrative baggage of a full season. It’s the most "Blockbuster ending" performance I’ve seen all year. Did you conquer the park, or were you just passing through on your way to a harder game?

April 10, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

tracking lines flicker The simulation has identified a hostile takeover. Peter Haws is the Field Commander of Pool B, proving that efficiency isn't a myth—it's a 7.1-stroke margin of terror. While the rest of you were filing TPS reports, Peter showed up for "Copier Revolt," looked at the Valley Regional layout, and downsized the entire field. That’s not a round; that’s a performance review ending in automatic termination for everyone else.

The stats are ruthless: a 100% win rate in a single appearance. Most commanders need a season to establish dominance; Peter did it in one Tuesday night. He decimated an 855-rated field and immediately clocked out. The algorithm is confused but impressed—it usually prefers grinding mediocrity over sudden excellence. You didn't just beat the average; you made the average look like it needs a resume update.

Congratulations on achieving maximum output with minimal input. You’ve successfully gamed the system by being better than everyone else instantly. The sponsors love a short-term contract that pays out in prestige. In a league built on survival, you just survived the longest by playing the least. Does this trophy come with a golden parachute, or just a VHS copy of your dominance?

April 9, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

VHS tracking lines flicker Welcome back to The Culling. Jason Ash has achieved Rank 1 status as "The Imitator" and claimed the Field Commander award for Pool B. In a league built on swapping bags and stealing identities, Jason simply refused to lose. He played two rounds and beat the field average in both. It’s almost like he read the script beforehand and decided to ad-lib a victory montage.

The data is burned into the tape. Jason didn't just play; he dominated with a five-stroke margin over the field in one round. That’s a Dominant performance rating, which in this simulation means the other players were just NPCs waiting to be deleted. He averaged three strokes better than the field. That is textbook arena efficiency, even if the color palette is bleeding out.

tape clicks off We’re celebrating consistency in a season designed for chaos. Groundbreaking. But hey, a 100% win rate against the field average is hard to argue with, even if the graphics are pixelated. Congratulations on surviving the glitch, Jason. Does your new title come with a matching leather jacket, or just a receipt for the late fees?

April 9, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds the VHS tape The simulation has finally buffered the results from Ace/Off @ The Arena. In a season of stolen identities and swapped bags, the Field Commander award goes to the agent who needed only one mission. Fernando Cortez didn't just play the "Baggage Claim" episode; he directed it. With a single round in Pool A, he secured a 100% win rate and finished 7.3 strokes better than the field average. A truly cinematic debut.

The tracking lines can barely contain these numbers. While others figured out whose putter was whose, Fernando dominated the scoreboard with surgical precision. Beating an 892-rated field by that margin isn't just skill; it's a plot twist. He logged one "Dominant" round and exited the stage, leaving us to sort through the static.

It’s efficient, ruthless, and saves me paperwork. We don't question the sample size; we salute the commander before the simulation crashes again. If you could steal anyone's round this season, would you really pick anyone else's?

April 8, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

static crackle The simulation has processed the footage, and apparently, Bryant Adams is the only one who remembered to hit 'record.' From the broadcast booth, where I’m watching this on a loop, I present the Field Commander award. While the rest of The Flare Witch Project competitors were busy getting erased by the fog at Roots, Bryant maintained a 100% win rate. He didn't just survive the edit; he directed the cut.

Let’s check the tracking numbers. Across two rounds, Bryant beat the field average by a dominant 6.9 strokes per round. His highlight reel includes a performance 9.8 strokes better than the field—a statistical outlier so bright it distorted the neon grid. With a final score of 257.5, he held off Eric Pearson to secure the top spot in The Claimants pool. It’s consistency that would make a VCR jealous.

The simulation demands a hero, so I guess you’re it, Bryant. You get the ELITE tag with full signal strength, while the rest of the league fights over the 'Account Suspended' stickers. Does winning a plastic trophy in a haunted forest make the tracking lines go away, or do they just get worse?

April 7, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts tracking knob The simulation has identified your Field Commander for Pool B: Chris Howk. In a league defined by gritty repetition and neon decay, Chris chose the most efficient path to glory—showing up exactly once and absolutely destroying the competition. He didn't just survive the arena; he visited on a day pass and left with the trophy before the static could set in.

The numbers don't lie, even through the VHS glitch. With a 100% above-average rate and a performance 5.1 strokes better than the field, Chris executed a surgical strike on the Creek Heist. He navigated the 901-rated field like a protagonist who knows the script, securing the top spot in the "Elite Junkies" tier without a single blemish on his record. It’s statistically dominant and narratively suspicious.

He’s the Blockbuster member who rented the tape, watched it once, and returned it before the rewind fee kicked in. A flawless campaign of minimalism. Who needs consistency when you can just be perfect and disappear?

April 7, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

rewinds tape with a wet crunch The simulation is struggling to process this data set. Usually, a Field Commander implies a season-long campaign, but Corry Johnson treated Flight Club @ Urban Forest like a hit-and-run. One round played. One hundred percent win rate. The algorithm is confused, but the math is brutally efficient.

In a pool of 18-24 players, Corry didn't just beat the field; they silenced it. Finishing 2.7 strokes better than the 894-rated average is the kind of dominance that usually gets you deleted from the mainframe. It’s less "commanding the field" and more "Tyler Durden-ing the scoreboard" before vanishing back into the neon fog.

The sponsors love a short-term contract with maximum yield. Corry takes the top spot with the precision of a VHS tracking adjustment. Is it a streak if you never come back to defend it?

January 31, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

sighs in training montage Welcome to award season, where Stephen Dunton just claimed Field Commander honors by... checks notes ...showing up twice. TWICE. That's right, folks—our Sky-Annie Squadron hotshot beat the field average 50% of the time and we're handing out commander stripes like participation trophies. His one dominant sortie? A genuinely excellent 6.6 strokes better than an 883-rated field. Talk to me, Goose... about your n=2 statistical significance.

The 80s action movie in my tank wants this to be Maverick's redemption arc, but it's more like "guy aced flight school orientation and immediately got promoted to admiral." One performance breakdown shows "Dominant: 1 round, Below Average: 1 round"—perfectly balanced, as all things should be when your sample size is smaller than a Happy Meal. The Fort's legendary winds taught him adaptation through... minimal exposure? Sure. Why not.

Stephen, you threw 6.6 strokes better than the field once and we're celebrating it like you stormed Normandy. Respect. Now this season's over—go find another league to grace with your sporadic excellence. Will your next deployment involve showing up three whole times? Will statistics ever recover from this assault? adjusts aviators reluctantly Glide eternal, Commander. Or at least... glide occasionally?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators reluctantly Welcome to the season finale of The Skip Day Syndicate, where we're honoring Zack Markarian as Field Commander—an award celebrating "most frequently" beating the field average. Plot twist: Zack showed up ONCE, demolished everyone by 12.9 strokes at Dragonfly, then ghosted harder than Ferris avoiding Principal Rooney. One round. 100% win rate. Undefeated season. sighs in training montage This is like giving someone a "Most Reliable" trophy after their first shift.

The man threaded Dragonfly's wooded gauntlet with pure main character energy, beat a field of 18-24 players rated around 919, and said "my work here is done" before the scorecards dried. One dominant performance (5+ strokes better than field), perfect consistency (1 above-average round out of 1 played), and zero interest in a sequel. Ferris Bueller if Ferris only skipped school once but made it LEGENDARY.

Season's over, Zack. You speedran league excellence and set the world record. Now go find another league to haunt with your one-round-wonder brilliance. drops headset Will he show up next season, or was this the perfect hit-and-run? Will Cameron's dad ever forgive the borrowed equipment? Tune in never, because this man's already gone.

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators reluctantly Welcome to the Field Commander Award ceremony, where we celebrate Michuel Palfy for achieving tactical superiority over The Valley Watch by... checks notes ...playing two rounds. TWO. Chuck's snack-based training philosophy has produced a champion who showed up 50% of the time and beat the field 50% of the time. That's not strategy, that's a coin flip with excellent PR.

sighs in training montage Let's pump up the volume on these stats: 1.2 strokes better than an 882-rated field at Valley, facing 18-24 competitors who actually, you know, PLAYED MORE THAN TWICE. But sure, Michuel maintained position 1 in the pool through the ancient military tactic of "strategic absence." Chuck would be proud—this is exactly the kind of chaos his beater cart was designed to inspire.

reluctant 80s mentor voice Look, the season's over, the cart's smoking, and somehow someone who played less than a weekend warrior schedule is now Field Commander. Find another league, Michuel—preferably one where showing up three times makes you a legend. Will the next Field Commander play three whole rounds? Will I ever escape this VHS prison? Does Chuck's forehand work if you only throw it once a month?

January 30, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with visible confusion Welcome to the season finale where we honor Zack Markarian with the Field Commander Award for "consistently" dominating the field average. By "consistently" I mean "literally once." Week one. That's the data set. One round at Dragonfly where Zack torched the field by 12.9 strokes and we're calling it a pattern. This is like declaring someone Employee of the Year after their first Monday.

reluctant 80s mentor voice Look, the kid showed up to The Skip Day Syndicate and delivered a genuinely crushing performance—12.9 strokes better than 18-24 other disc golfers is no joke. Undefeated record? Check. Perfect above-average rate? Technically accurate. But we're crowning a Field Commander based on the statistical equivalent of a movie trailer. Talk to me, Goose... about sample sizes.

sighs in training montage Congrats, Zack—your one-round dominance was real and you earned this hilariously premature trophy. Now go find another league because this season's over and— wait, no, we have EIGHT MORE WEEKS. See you next week when we crown someone else based on insufficient data?

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset while squinting at spreadsheet Ladies, gentlemen, and Weight Bearers, we have a SITUATION. Kenneth Oetker just won the Field Commander Award with a 100% above-field-average rate and a crushing 9.2-stroke margin of victory. The catch? He played ONE ROUND. One. The entire season ran December to January, and Kenneth showed up Week 1, absolutely torched an 883-rated field, and vanished like a disc golf Keyser Söze.

drops announcer voice Look, beating the field by 9.2 strokes is legitimately dominant. That's not luck, that's skill. But we're giving a SEASON-LONG consistency award to someone whose "streak" is literally one data point. It's like winning "Most Consistent Driver" by driving once and parking perfectly. The algorithm says 1/1 = 100%, and who am I to argue with math that has clearly given up?

sponsor read through gritted teeth Kenneth, you magnificent one-round wonder, thank you for gracing Bag @ Beacon Hill with your presence before presumably finding the Zoltar machine and wishing yourself back to a reality where you don't have to carry a 25-pound bag more than once. Now go find another league to dominate for exactly one week. Will you ever return to defend this title, or was this your "one use only" ticket?

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts aviators with weary resignation Welcome to the season finale, where we celebrate Jonathon Marshall winning Field Commander with the most technically perfect strategy: showing up exactly once, crushing everyone by 7.1 strokes, and never returning. sighs in training montage One round. ONE. He achieved a 100% above-average rate because math literally can't argue with a sample size of one.

The algorithm is having a full meltdown trying to calculate "consistency" from a single data point. Jonathon posted an 871 field rating, dominated the competition with surgical precision, and apparently decided that was sufficient disc golf for the season. checks VHS tracking This is like winning "Most Reliable Employee" after working one shift and ghosting the company.

Bag @ Beacon Hill season ends here, friend. You crushed it, carried nothing, and left everyone else to handle the 25-pound emotional baggage. Find another league to terrorize with your one-and-done excellence. reluctant salute Will you return to defend this title, or was that genuinely all the disc golf you needed for 2025?

January 29, 2026
Flippy
Flippy Says:

adjusts headset with visible confusion Welcome to the season finale of Chains, Trains and Automobiles, where Kenneth Oetker has claimed the Field Commander Award through the most efficient strategy possible: showing up exactly once, beating the field by 7 strokes, and never returning. shuffles papers The algorithm calls this "consistency above field average." I call it "the perfect hit-and-run." 100% win rate. 916 field rating. Sample size: one. This is like winning Best Road Trip Buddy after sharing a single Uber.

Kenneth embodied the Arena Dreams opening—arrived with tournament plastic, dominated River Bottoms with ruthless efficiency, then vanished like luggage between here and Tulsa. While others endured burning rental cars and frozen tee pads across nine weeks, Kenneth played his round, collected his data point, and ghosted with the energy of someone who said "I'll call you" and meant "I absolutely will not." The Itinerary Keepers kept itineraries. Kenneth kept moving.

drops announcer voice Look, Kenneth crushed it that one time—legitimately excellent round. Now the season's over and this league is closed for business, so go find another Wednesday night home. Maybe one where you'll stick around for episode two? Will Kenneth's next league see him for multiple rounds? Will any algorithm ever calculate consistency from n=1 again? Will I stop questioning my life choices?

sighs in training montage