Marti finds the Ultimate challenge

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Aly Marti (right) defends the disk in a recent Ultimate contest playing for TSUnami Women's Ultimate team from Truman State University. (Photo contributed)

Kevin Hieronymus
khieronymus@bcrnews.com Aly Marti ran track and cross country at Princeton High School and was active in band, choir and theater. Oh, and she also found time to become a class valedictorian in 2007.

She found a whole new adventure this spring at Truman State University — the sport of Ultimate, originally referred to as Ultimate Frisbee.

Marti had played a little Ultimate with friends during cross country practice in high school. When she arrived on the Truman State campus in Kirksville, Mo., she saw students on the quad advertising for Ultimate and figured it was an intramural program.

It turned out to be a club team, and she found they took the game seriously.

“I thought it was like intramurals, but it was a lot more intense,” she said.

She played on the TSUnami women’s Ultimate club team that represented Truman State at the Ultimate Players Association (UPA) South Women’s Regionals in Baton Rouge, La., in late April. They fell one game short of reaching nationals, recording six wins in the regional tournament before losing to Texas 15-7 in the finals.

Marti was hooked.

The game of Ultimate combines the non-stop movement and athletic endurance of soccer with the aerial passing skills of football. It is played by two, seven-player squads with a high-tech plastic disc on a field similar to football. The object of the game is to score by catching a pass in the opponent’s end zone. Games are generally played to 13 or 15.

A player must stop running while in possession of the disc, but may pivot and pass to any of the other receivers on the field. Players move quickly from offense to defense on turnovers that occur with a dropped pass, an interception, a pass out of bounds, or when a player is caught holding the disc for more than 10 seconds.

Marti likes the whole atmosphere around the game, including being outdoors; she also likes the friends she’s made.

“I’ve still got an outlet for my competitiveness since I’m not involved in running anymore,” said Marti, who is studying visual communications at Truman State and working a design internship this summer at Martin Engineering in Neponset under her dad, Andrew.

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