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Tournament Director Spotlight: Jeff Jacquart

Tournament Director Spotlight: Jeff Jacquart

Q&A with the TD of the Las Vegas Challenge

Sunday, February 27, 2022 - 09:30

(This is the first of a series coming to PDGA.com to get to know the tournament directors of the PDGA Elite Series and beyond.)

Tournament directors are often the unsung heroes of disc golf competition. They spend their time preparing and hosting disc golf tournaments all over the world.

Get to know Jeff Jacquart, PDGA No. 10749, the tournament director for the Disc Golf Pro Tour - Las Vegas Challenge presented by Innova and the PDGA Director of Competition.

How did you discover disc golf for the first time?

JJ: A good friend of mine — Patrick Bragg #13133 — and I played freestyle and did a lot of things together, pool, darts, volleyball — all of that stuff. His boss told him one day, you know we have one of the oldest disc golf courses around out at Sunset Park and that the first holes went in during the late 70s. We went out there to play, took our Wham-Os out there and didn't do very well. The guy in front of us handed us a golf disc and we were immediately hooked. We pretty much dropped everything else we were doing. I was hooked immediately. It was somewhere around 1995-96. Once we went out to Sunset Park and once we got involved with the local club, we were hooked. It was a rush, something new, something exciting. We all grew up throwing Wham-Os and Frisbees around but now there's a sport.

I got on our local club's board in 1998, became the club president in 2000 and we got our non-profit status in 2007-08. We both immediately got involved with the club. I haven't stopped since then. I don't do anything besides disc golf, it has become my life. I retired from the county early so I could become a PDGA employee and I'm really looking forward to the future.

What is the history of the Las Vegas Challenge?

Our local club would run a couple of events a year, but I would also go to Southern California to play Golden State with Tim Selinkse as the TD and the Memorial with Dan Ginnelly and his whole crew down there. Those two and their entire clubs made me want to do my own tournament and take it up to a higher level than what our local club was doing. I was learning that from Tim and Dan.

In 2000, we ran it as a little C-Tier. It just happened to fit really close to Wintertime Open and the Memorial so over the years, there was kind of a tour flow every week — Wintertime then Vegas then the Memorial.

We eventually out-did ourselves comparing ourselves to those events, but they were the driving force as to how take a typical C-Tier event up to the next level as a B-Tier then an A-Tier. We used to brag that we were one of the top A-Tiers in the world before we became a PDGA National Tour and a DGPT. It was really those two. It was Tim and Dan that made me want to take our event to the next level.

PDGA Radio: Jeff Jacquart »

What advice do you have for tournament directors?

One thing I express to my lead staff and volunteers is that we're not perfect. We're going to do something wrong. Admit to it, move on and make it learning experience — how we can avoid that next time? But there are a lot of personalities that we have to deal with. It's a leadership trait that TDs have to learn is how to deal with the different personalities and issues. From the staff to the players. It's a very difficult leadership position.

It's really hard for us to say 'I don't know what I'm doing' or 'I need help' or 'I don't know the answer all of the time.' We need to start to be able to do that. There's nothing wrong with saying 'I don't know. Let me get back to you' or 'You're right, we did it wrong, we're going to fix it.' So for the new TDs, there will be some frustration but reach out to other TDs that have been doing this for a long time. Anyone that wants to call me, anyone that wants to talk to Doug (Bjerkaas), anyone that wants to talk to Nate (Heinold), I'm sure their phones are wide open, give them a call.

Reach out to others, talk to them. Also try to bring up your right and left hand people to see how they can take over some of the burden for you or if you need to walk away for a little bit, how they can take over for that position. I can't emphasize that enough to the new TDs: You're going to get frustrated with things. Take a breather, talk to your right-hand person, gather your support and say you need a little help and ask what they think. Let it set and simmer a little bit before you make a decision.

You have to have an understanding what you can and cannot do. Understand that you cannot make everyone happy. This is my 23rd year doing this. The first 10 years of running the LVC, I was so worried about the handful of criticisms that I was getting from a couple of players that I forgot about the 200 players that were having a great time. Over time, you'll realize that no matter what you do, you'll get criticism.

What is one thing that tournament directors often overlook?

Those oddball spots where you never thought someone would throw that route or throw that far to be OB, whether it's OB or not. Did they make the mando or not? Is it an unsafe lie or not? What TDs will typically overlook is not expecting those really weird shots that the TD or staff can't throw.

OB lines, you think that there is no way that an area is going to come into play and it will. It does. Detailed notes and rules in the caddy book. Make sure that your course is clear. The caddy book is the bible.

Preach the provisional rule.

Tell us about your new role with the PDGA as Director of Competition.

I'm so excited about this position. I am the director for the Majors. I am still in training. Michael Downes and Andrew Sweeton have been training me quite well. I just can't do what they've been doing for the last 10 to 20 years just yet. Eventually, I will be in the position where I — and my entire team — will be working very closely with local hosts for each Major to make sure that it is going as smooth as it can, making sure all of the PDGA rules and policies are being implemented.

One of the reasons that I was hired was to bring a little more excitement into the Majors, something that we see out here at LVC. It's not just a disc golf event anymore, it's an experience for the vendors, experience for the spectators and all of the volunteers. What can we add to the Majors to make it feel more like an experience vs. just a disc golf event?

One of my roles is to have a more active role in all of the Majors. Continuing on with the Majors, we want to make sure that there is a lot of coordination with the local host. My current team is already doing that now, and have been doing that for some time. There is going to be some new and exciting changes to bring up that level of what a Major is going to be. Then, on top of that, we want to have a more active role in the Elite Series. We want to expand the marshaling program, so there will be more PDGA staff members as a marshal at all of the Elite events as well.

On top of that, because of the growth at a national level, there is going to be additional people from other departments at all of the Majors as well. I think you're going to see a huge change in support now that there are finally some resources in place for that to happen from a PDGA perspective.

To accommodate all of those players at a combined Worlds, it's going to take an army from the local host and the PDGA is going to send in an army as well.

I'm so excited for this new position. I can't want.