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Paul McBeth

Paul McBeth
— Disc Golfer —
Personal information
Full name Paul McBeth
Born Huntington Beach, CA
Height 5 ft 8 in (173 cm)
Nationality  United States
Residence Huntington Beach, CA
Career
Turned professional 2008
Current tour(s) PDGA National Tour
Disc Golf World Tour
Disc Golf Pro Tour
Professional wins 91
Number of wins by tour
PDGA National Tour 16
Disc Golf World Tour 2
Disc Golf Pro Tour 2
Best results in major championships
PDGA World Championships Won: 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
USDGC Won: 2015
Aussie Open Won: 2015
European Masters Won: 2014
European Open Won: 2013, 2015, 2016
Japan Open 3rd: 2014
Achievements and awards
PDGA Male Rookie of the Year 2008
National Tour Series Champion 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
PDGA Male Player of the Year 2013, 2014, 2015
Disc Golf Pro Tour Champion 2016

Paul McBeth (born July 9, 1990) is an American professional disc golfer from Huntington Beach, California. He has won the PDGA World Championships four times in a row (in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015). McBeth was the top ranked player in the PDGA World Ranking at the end of 2015.

McBeth turned pro in 2008. His career earnings are $293,386.59 (as of March 2017). He has an endorsement deal with Innova Discs and Adidas footwear.

Although he played his first professional event in 2006, McBeth's professional career began in 2008, when he played in 29 professional events, netting $11,852.50 in winnings and earning the PDGA Male Rookie of the Year Award. Along with his four World titles, McBeth has received the PDGA Male Player of the year three times (2013, 2014, 2015).

McBeth dominated the 2015 season, winning 19 of 25 events by an average of almost 6 strokes and finishing in the top 3 in every event. He won all five Major events, disc golf's first Grand Slam, including his fourth World title and his first ever win at the USDGC, making him only the third man to win both the World and US titles in the same year (after Ken Climo and Barry Schultz). McBeth also took home three NT wins and earned enough points to win the National Tour for the fourth straight year.

2016 started off looking like a continuation of McBeth's commanding 2015 season. After winning a B-Tier event in California, McBeth won the Memorial Championship (NT), followed by the La Mirada Open, the first event of the Disc Golf World Tour (DGWT). At the Nick Hyde Memorial (A-Tier), McBeth lost in a sudden death playoff with Nate Sexton and Simon Lizotte, who went on to win the event. Over the next three events, McBeth lost the Glass Blown Open (NT) by one stroke to Cam Todd, the Konopiste Open (DGWT) in a playoff to Lizotte, and the Masters Cup by one stroke to Ricky Wysocki on a 70-foot putt. Citing knee pain as the reason for his falling putting percentage, McBeth switched to a straddle stance for the European Open (DGWT), an event he hasn’t lost since 2011. The switch was effective, and McBeth bested Wysocki by two strokes to win the event. Back home in the United States, however, McBeth's struggles continued. He placed 3rd in the Beaver State Fling (NT), and then tied for 12th place in the Vibram Open (NT), his lowest finish in three years. After another one stroke loss to Wysocki at the European Masters (DGWT), McBeth took another 12th-place finish at the Majestic. Wysocki continued his incredible season with his first World title, beating McBeth by 6 strokes and ending his 4-year winning streak. Feeling healthy and his form back in check, McBeth took a commanding 12 stroke win at the Ledgestone Insurance Open the next week, followed by an 11 stroke victory at the Brent Hambrick Memorial Open (NT). McBeth finished the National Tour in second place behind Wysocki, ending another 4-year streak. At the end of the inaugural Disc Golf Pro Tour, McBeth placed 4th in the Green Mountain Championship, resulting in a 5th-place finish in the points standings and an automatic berth into the Tour Championship semifinals, which he would go on to win. McBeth donated his $10,000 winnings from the Tour Championship to help pay his cousin's medical bills, who was injured in an accident. The 2016 season ended on a low note for McBeth: he finished in 20th place at the USDGC, shooting 2 over par after 3 rounds (the final round was cancelled due to Hurricane Matthew). Additionally, a scoring error in round 3 resulted in a two stroke penalty. Without the two stroke error, McBeth would have finished in 14th place, earning enough points to win the inaugural Disc Golf World Tour, but he instead took second place to Wysocki by just 75 points.


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