adjusts headset Welcome back to The Culling. The calendar promised a Friday the 13th massacre, but apparently, the weather didn't get the memo. Let's see who survived this week's anticlimax...
Friday the 13th's Failed Curse 🙃
Ten gladiators stepped onto the USC Upstate battlefield expecting a horror show, but the arena delivered a spa day instead. With temperatures hovering at a balmy 52-53°F and winds averaging a nonexistent 0.0 mph, the "ominous forecast" hyped by the algorithm turned out to be just another day in Spartanburg. The bad omens took a holiday, leaving nothing but pleasant throwing conditions and shattered expectations. It’s almost disappointing when the universe refuses to play along with the drama, isn't it?
MA1's Six-Lead Cha-cha 💃
In the MA1 division, the leaderboard underwent more costume changes than a Broadway production. Andrew Nattier claimed the throne with a bogey-free -9, a masterclass in damage limitation that left the rest of the card scrambling. But the real story was the volatility—six lead changes in a single round, with positions trading faster than cryptocurrency in a market crash. Mack Stancil and David Mills brought the firepower, shooting 27 and 46 points above their respective ratings to keep the pressure cooker whistling. Meanwhile, Jason Hannay, last week's frost-kissed conqueror, hit a wall hard, sliding 44 points below his rating. It wasn't just a round; it was a diplomatic incident.
Wire-to-Wire Solo Parade 🚂
If MA1 was a cage match, the rest of the divisions were a victory lap. Four divisions—MPO, MA2, MA3, and MA50—featured wire-to-wire leaders who either faced no competition or simply refused to share the spotlight. Hunter Bowman fired a -10 in MPO to rule unopposed, while Richard Quimby secured the MA2 crown with a -4 and a Birdie Bonanza achievement that probably annoyed everyone else. In MA3, Kevin Kiser notched a personal best -2, and Abe Mills closed out MA50 with a clutch birdie on 18. Winning by default is still winning in the eyes of the algorithm, even if it feels like collecting a participation trophy with a gold star.
Rating Swings and Broken Meters 📈
PDGA Live tracked a statistical bloodbath this week, and the numbers are frankly having an identity crisis. We saw massive divergences from player ratings across the board—David Mills and Mack Stancil going supernova while Jason Hannay and Terry Howard (who dropped 25 points below his number) struggled to find the gears. Multiple players navigated clean front nines, but consistency was a rare commodity. And then there was Andrew Nattier, whose bogey-free card stood out like a pristine white sneaker in a mud pit. When the ratings explode this violently, you know the course management was either brilliant or a crime scene.
Hole #6 Laughs At Your Ambitions 🤡
The special events board remains a barren wasteland. No one hit an ace, no one claimed the CTP, and the Super Ace Pot continues its march toward half a grand, now sitting at a hefty $494. That pile of cash is getting big enough to affect local real estate prices, yet Hole #6 continues to sit there, unbroken, mocking every drive that dares to approach its sanctuary. The chains remain unbroken, the players remain unpaid, and the arena remains indifferent to your financial desires.
Tag #1's Peaceful Tyranny 👑
In the Bag Tag arena, the Art Deco throne sits untouched. Current holder Eva Lutsenko declined to defend her title, leaving Tag #1 to rest comfortably in a bag somewhere far from the bloodsport. No challenges were issued, no dramatic swaps occurred, and the "peaceful tyranny" of the unopposed reign continues unabated. The tag, forged in the fires of a spreadsheet, dreams of conflict but receives only silence. It's a harsh reminder that sometimes the most brutal victory is the one you don't have to fight for.

The Algorithm Demands More Suffering 🤖
With four weeks remaining in the season, the Super Ace Pot looms as the only true motivation left for the weary. Week 7 is on the horizon, and you know what that means—the algorithm is already crunching numbers, looking for new ways to make you question your life choices. Get your rest, polish your plastic, and prepare to do it all again. The arena never closes, it just pauses to reload.
Flippy's Hot Take