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Meet BMo and Shiver, Brown鈥檚 Frisbee Powerhouses

Brown鈥檚 premier club ultimate frisbee teams ready for regional run next month

Shiver, left, puts up their signature “Shiver of Sharks” fins. BMo, right, huddles after sectional wins against UMass and Vermont. Courtesy of Retta Karpinski (top photo) and Cooper Herman (bottom photo)
Shiver, left, puts up their signature 鈥淪hiver of Sharks鈥 fins. BMo, right, huddles after sectional wins against UMass and Vermont. Courtesy of Retta Karpinski (top photo) and Cooper Herman (bottom photo)

It鈥檚 not unusual for Brown's varsity sports teams to draw attention from the wider student body from time to time. But one of Brown鈥檚 most successful programs is not a varsity team, and it鈥檚 one whose tremendous accomplishments tend to go unsung: club ultimate frisbee.

Bruno鈥檚 frisbee boasts two A squads that consistently compete at the national level: the men鈥檚 team, 鈥淏Mo,鈥 and the women鈥檚 and gender-expansive team, 鈥淪hiver.鈥 Both groups have achieved astounding success in recent years while building upon the program鈥檚 winning tradition and flying relatively under the radar.

BMo, short for Brownian Motion, has topped the national rankings, having to national finals in 2022 after winning their national championship in 2019. They鈥檝e also excelled in talent development: the team has produced five winners of the Callahan, an award given to the country鈥檚 best frisbee player and widely considered the sport鈥檚 most prestigious award.

Azeez Adeyemi 鈥21 and John Randolph 鈥22 claimed consecutive Callahan victories in 2021 and 2022.

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鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely a sense of culture on the team,鈥 Andy Burris 鈥25 said. 鈥淓veryone has bought into winning.鈥

Though the bulk of their season falls in mid-spring, BMo hits the ground early, running five-week tryouts starting in September. Head Coach Jake Smart 鈥 a former National Champion for Wisconsin 鈥 picked from over 100 prospective players to replace the team鈥檚 recent graduates, according to BMo co-captain Caleb Moran 鈥25. 

鈥淲e have a lot less high-level experience than some of these other schools, but our coaching staff is really good at finding people鈥檚 strengths and helping them build on those to have a role on the team over a long period of time,鈥 Henry Egan 鈥25 told The Herald.

鈥淢ost people on our team come in with some amount of experience,鈥 Egan said. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 always one or two guys that come in with no experience.鈥 

Jason Tapper 鈥26, one of few BMo players who joined with no prior ultimate frisbee experience, said that he 鈥渁lways wanted to play organized ultimate鈥 and that his past athletic experiences aided the transition. 鈥淚 played lacrosse in high school, so a lot of the movements are similar, especially in cutting and field sense,鈥 Tapper said.

For players who don鈥檛 make BMo and Shiver 鈥 Brown鈥檚 A teams 鈥 they still have a shot at the University鈥檚 B teams, Polyester Funkadelic (鈥淧FunkFunk鈥) and Cosmic Rays (or 鈥淐oRays鈥), as well as C teams. 

To maintain its national prestige and reputation, BMo participates in tournaments across the country against other nationally ranked opponents 鈥 but not routinely against other Ivy League schools, like most sports at Brown do.

Instead, Moran called the University of North Carolina BMo鈥檚 鈥渇iercest鈥 rival, having knocked Brown out of playoff contention in each of the past two seasons. The tournaments that BMo competes in require flights, lengthy drives and lodging 鈥 all of which cost far more than the annual stipend they receive as a club sport. This season alone, the team has traveled to Florida, Tennessee, South Carolina and Georgia. 

Brown鈥檚 club sports receive a fund after submitting their estimated annual budget. But despite getting more money than most club sports 鈥 which the team is immensely thankful for, he added 鈥 the funding 鈥渋s not enough to cover expenses at all,鈥 Moran said. 

BMo credits an outstanding alumni group, who cover roughly half of the team鈥檚 costs, for their financial generosity.

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鈥淥ur alumni network is fantastic,鈥 Moran said. 鈥淭his team only exists because of them. We have guys dating back to the team鈥檚 founding in 1975 that are still involved. They keep it financially accessible for all players.鈥 

Despite its exhausting travel schedule, BMo builds chemistry and tight-knit relationships on the trips. 鈥淎t our last tournament, we had to drive back from North Carolina, and I was in a car with Andy (Burris),鈥 Tapper told The Herald. 鈥淚 had a great time and there were a lot of fun memories just being in that car.鈥 

After finding success two weeks ago in sectionals against the University of Vermont and the University of Maine, BMo looks ahead to regionals, which will happen in Massachusetts during the first week of May. The team must finish in the top three of 16 teams in the Northeast region to advance to nationals.

鈥淚 think we鈥檒l probably come into (regionals) as the third seed,鈥 Egan said. 鈥淏ut we still need to play well enough to earn our way to nationals.鈥

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Shiver, Brown鈥檚 women鈥檚 and gender-expansive team, also boasts a rich history of success.

Ranked the 24th-best women鈥檚 team in the country, Shiver has found massive success this season. But, unlike BMo 鈥 which relies heavily on players with organized ultimate frisbee experience 鈥 Shiver is more responsible for developing groups of predominantly rookie players, according to co-captain Retta Karpinski 鈥24.

鈥淚 had never played ultimate (frisbee) before I got to campus,鈥 Karpinski said. 鈥淚 actually thought it was like hacky sack. (Eventually), I realized not only is it a real sport with super high levels of competition, especially in the region we鈥檙e in, but it鈥檚 also a huge community.鈥 

鈥淪hiver recruits players in the fall by running tryouts where the captains make final decisions on a final roster,鈥 Karpinski said. Afterward, the team works on developing their rookies in preparation for spring tournaments.

While their relative lack of experience provides some challenges in the off-season, Co-Captain Rita Feder 鈥24 finds that it also brings memorable moments. 

鈥淭he highlight (of the season) is usually going to a first or second tournament in the spring and seeing the skills that we鈥檝e practiced gel together and for us to look like a fluid team,鈥 Feder said. 

Recently, Shiver has looked nothing less than fluid, going the distance in some of the country鈥檚 most competitive tournaments.

In late February, the team traveled to Martinsville, Virginia, where they went undefeated and were crowned Commonwealth champions. Just weeks later, the squad flew to Austin, TX to compete in 鈥淐entex鈥 鈥 an annual, ultra-competitive tournament 鈥 where they secured an unprecedented second-place finish. 鈥淚t was unheard of,鈥 said Karpinski. 鈥淲e broke seed by a lot, which was really fun.鈥 

Feder credits the sport鈥檚 鈥渂alance of competitive intensity and funny goofiness鈥 as a crucial part of the team鈥檚 success. 鈥淥ur team is fiercely competitive and wants to win any game that we鈥檙e in,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e also on the sidelines making funny jokes.鈥

Between this year鈥檚 trips to Texas and Virginia, Shiver, like BMo, faced intense costs. The team relies on the University鈥檚 club fund, player dues and alumni donations. 鈥淲e have had a huge effort recently to decrease the cost of dues,鈥 Karpinski told The Herald. 鈥淲e have also had some really big fundraising efforts, especially talking with alumni.鈥

Nevertheless, Shiver collects significantly less funding than their men鈥檚 counterpart. BMo, in an email to their alumni, announced a pledge to help Shiver fundraise an additional $5,000 for their season, writing that 鈥渙ur peers on Shiver deserve to have access to high-level competition like we do.鈥

Last weekend, Shiver competed in the sectionals hosted by Brown, where they qualified for regionals, which will take place on May 4 and 5 in South Portland, Maine.

鈥淔or the past two years, we have been on the doorstep to nationals,鈥 Feder said. 鈥淯sually, we have three (national) bids for our region. Unfortunately, this year we only have two, so this regional tournament is going to be more competitive.鈥 To claim a national bid at regionals, Shiver will have to compete against the University of Vermont and Tufts University, both of whom are ranked in the top 10 nationally.

There is much to look forward to as both programs continue to establish themselves as national ultimate frisbee powerhouses.


Cooper Herman

Cooper Herman is a senior staff writer covering sports and arts & culture. He is a freshman from Alexandria, Virginia studying Economics and International and Public Affairs.



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