Australian Disc Golf · National Teams

Australia on the world stage

Since 2016, Australian Disc Golf has selected and sent teams to compete at the highest level of international disc golf. This is the complete record of every campaign including the players, the support staff, and the stories behind each journey.

PDGA/WFDF World Teams Championship · Vancouver, Canada

2016

A ski mountain, six nations, and a brand new kind of world championship.

Dates18–21 August 2016
LocationVancouver, Canada
Nations6
Result5th of 6
Patrick Robinson, Kingsley Flett, Sally Hill and David Bandy ready to represent Australia.

When Australian Disc Golf sent a team to Vancouver in August 2016, they were entering uncharted territory. The PDGA and WFDF had joined forces to create something that had never existed before: a national team world championship. Six nations answered the call. Australia was one of them.

The course played across the ski slopes of Grouse Mountain and through Queen Elizabeth Park in downtown Vancouver, dramatic settings for a historic occasion. In a field of six, Australia finished fifth, ahead of Brazil. But the scoreline was beside the point. The team had worn the green and gold, stood at a start line alongside teams from Canada, New Zealand, Japan and the USA, and shown that Australian disc golf belonged on the world stage.

The ADG produced fundraiser shirts in green and gold and navy and gold to help get the team make the journey. Kingsley Flett, who has photographed and written about Australian disc golf for decades, competed in the Masters division. David Bandy would later become ADG president. Patrick Robinson, making his international debut here, would go on to co-captain the team to a silver medal eight years later in Perth.

ADG fundraiser shirts 2016
ADG fundraiser shirts — green/gold & navy/gold, 2016
Dave Bandy getting a practice round in before representing Australia at the World Teams Championships in Canada – 2016

Players

NameStateDivisionPDGA#
David BandyWAMPO#8534
Patrick RobinsonVICMPO#62059
Sally HillNSWFPO#43271
Kingsley FlettWAMasters#46727

Final standings

PlaceNation
🥇 1stUSA
🥈 2ndNew Zealand
🥉 3rdJapan
4thCanada
5thAustralia
6thBrazil

WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship · Alutaguse, Estonia

2019

Eleven players made the long journey to rural Estonia. The result was modest. The foundation was not.

Dates21–24 August 2019
LocationAlutaguse, Estonia
Nations17
Result16th of 17
Mathew Lamy tees off on Day 2.

The largest team Australia had ever assembled for international disc golf made the long journey to remote Ida-Virumaa, Estonia, to compete in a 17-nation field. For many it was their first experience of international team competition under a national flag. The format of country-versus-country match play was one rarely played in Australia, adding a layer of tactical complexity to an already challenging environment.

Before leaving, the team had resourcefully sought out the one Australian who knew match play at the highest level: Chris Himing, ADG Hall of Famer and 1993 World Team Champion. Himing had competed in the very first World Team Championships in Hitachi, Japan, where his team of four (two Americans, a Japanese player, and himself) famously defeated the favourites, a team featuring 12-time world champion Ken Climo. He shared that knowledge generously with the 2019 squad. “The feeling of standing on the podium with your team-mates, being crowned World Team Champions, was an honour, privilege and true thrill,” he told the team.

Co-captains Jonathan Jonas and Ken Summers handled rostering, tactics, and coordination throughout the event. On Day 2, the squad welcomed a replacement player: Natalie Jones stepped in using the spare registration spot left by Ken-Kristjan Toomjoe, who had registered but was unable to travel. She partnered with Ken Summers in the FPO/Masters doubles on Day 2 — and they won.

Kairi Koobakene opened the campaign with Australia’s first win, defeating Spain’s FPO player in six holes. By the end of the Russia match on Day 2, the team had collected four wins: JJ and Andre in MPO doubles, Archer Shaw in the junior singles, and Ken and Natalie in the Masters/FPO doubles. Jacob Stanley’s singles match went down to the wire, with the Russian player sealing it with an ace on the final hole.

The scoreline (16th of 17) doesn’t tell the real story. This campaign established the team’s identity and a culture that would fuel the dramatic improvement seen three years later in Croatia. The seeds planted in Estonia grew into a silver medal.

Winners!! Ken Summers and Natalie Jones take the Russian Men’s Masters-Female Open doubles game.
The team co-captains, JJ and Ken, have been working hard organising rosters, planning, attending meetings, and generally coordinating everything for the team.

Players

NameStatePDGA#Rating
Jonathan Jonas (Co-Captain)NSW#36449947
Ken Summers (Co-Captain)WA#77084879
Sue SummersWA#77086762
Shaun BateyWA#87402886
Priit KoivNSW#89199927
Jacob StanleyWA#92300905
Ken-Kristjan Toomjoe (registered; did not travel)#101606938
Kairi KoobakeneNSW#103462799
Mathew LamyNSW#104660901
Archer ShawQLD#106823715
Andre-Kristopher Toomjõe#117757937
Natalie JonesQLD#111467697

Support staff

Team manager
To be confirmed
Matchplay coach (pre-event)
Chris Himing
Selectors
To be confirmed

Match results

OpponentPoolNotable
SpainDay 1Kairi Koobakene wins FPO singles in 6 holes — Australia’s first win
RussiaDay 23 wins: JJ & Andre (MPO doubles), Archer Shaw (junior singles), Ken & Natalie (Masters/FPO doubles)
USADay 3 (9am)
CroatiaDay 3 (2pm)
LatviaDay 4Final placing match — Pool J

Final standings (top 5 + Australia)

PlaceNation
🥇 1stFinland
🥈 2ndGermany
🥉 3rdEstonia
4thAustria
5thCzech Republic
16thAustralia

WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship · Varaždin, Croatia

2022 — The Sugar Gliders find their wings

Seeded 11th of 26. Lost in the quarter-final to the eventual bronze medallists. Won 5th place. Won the Spirit Award. Showed the world what Australian disc golf could do.

Dates17–21 August 2022
LocationVaraždin, Croatia
Nations26
Seeding11th
Result5th + 🏆 Spirit Award
📷 Hero photoTeam photo — Croatia 2022 · Photo credit Maja Šimenc or Ken Summers

Twenty-six nations. Two hundred and fifty-four athletes. Four hundred and fifty-six rounds of match play. The largest World Teams Disc Golf Championship ever held, played on two courses on the banks of the River Drava in Varaždin, Croatia — and Australia, seeded 11th, went and finished 5th.

They lost to Canada in a heartbreaking quarter-final. Canada went on to win bronze. Australia regrouped, won a tense 5th-place playoff against Germany, and then received an award no scoreline can capture — the Spirit Award, voted for by every other nation at the event. It was a powerful endorsement of the culture the team had built.

“My personal goal is to make the top 8 teams. And then we are just 3 wins away from winning the whole championship… Let’s show the world what Aussie disc golf can do.”
— Chris Hill, Team Captain, before the event
📷 PhotoMatch play action — Croatia · Maja Šimenc
📷 PhotoSpirit Award ceremony or team celebration

Players

NameStateDivision
Chris Hill (Captain)NSWMPO
Aaron MoretonQLDMPO
Chris FinnWAMPO
Darren Stace-SmithVICMPO
Dave PerryVICMPO
Jonathan JonasNSWMP40
Luke BayneQLDMPO
Paul NoesenWAMPO
Gina HillNSWFPO
Sarah LeeSAFPO
Sue SummersWAFPO

Support staff

Team manager
To be confirmed
Coach
To be confirmed
Selectors
Cassie Sweetten · Bruce McNaughton · Chris Hill

Final standings (top 5 + awards)

PlaceNation
🥇 1stEstonia
🥈 2ndCzech Republic
🥉 3rdCanada
4th
5th + 🏆 Spirit AwardAustralia

WFDF Asia-Oceania Teams Disc Golf Championship · Taipei, Chinese Taipei

2023 — Bronze in Taipei

An inaugural regional championship. A team assembled in weeks. A bronze medal — and two holes from gold.

Dates30 Dec 2023 – 2 Jan 2024
LocationTaipei, Chinese Taipei
Result🥉 Bronze
📷 Hero photoTeam Australia receiving bronze medals · Huazhong Riverside Park, Taipei

The first WFDF Asia-Oceania Teams Disc Golf Championship was organised at relatively short notice, and Australia’s team of nine was assembled quickly — some players barely knowing each other before they arrived in Taipei. Captain Aaron Moreton made it his mission from day one to turn near-strangers into a unit, instilling a sense of national pride in the jersey from the opening team meeting.

It worked. Australia matched and beat higher-ranked opposition throughout the event, coming within two holes of the gold medal match. The bronze they came home with was hard-fought, and for many players in the squad, the experience lit a fire that wouldn’t go out.

“Once you experience it, you want to experience it again. If anybody is on the fence about whether to try out for the Australian team, don’t hesitate.”
— Jason Browne, 2023 campaign
📷 PhotoJason Browne and Sharon Costa vs Thailand — doubles match
📷 PhotoHuazhong Riverside Park course · Taipei

Players

NameStateNotes
Aaron Moreton (Captain)QLD
Jason BrowneWA
Sharon Costa
6 further players — to be confirmed

Support staff

Team manager
To be confirmed
Coach
To be confirmed
Selectors
To be confirmed

WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship · Mundaring, Western Australia

2024 — Silver on home soil

Australia hosted the world — and reached the gold medal final for the first time ever. Their best result. Played partly in a moonboot.

Dates6–9 November 2024
LocationMundaring, Perth, WA
Nations23
Seeding8th
Result🥈 Silver
📷 Hero photoTeam photo — Mundaring 2024 · Gold medal match vs Estonia · Silver medal ceremony

Australia hosted the fifth edition of the WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship — the first ever held in the southern hemisphere — at Mundaring Disc Golf Venue in the Perth Hills. Then they went and reached the gold medal final.

Seeded 8th, the Sugar Gliders powered through the draw to face back-to-back world champions Estonia in the final. They pushed hard. Estonia held on, finishing the tournament with a record of 30 wins, 3 draws and 1 loss across the entire event. The silver medal Australia took home was the best result in the history of Australian team disc golf — and it earned them a place at The World Games 2025 in Chengdu.

Behind the numbers was one of the campaign’s defining stories. Co-captain Cassie Sweetten broke her ankle during practice the day before competition began. She couldn’t play a single competitive round. Instead, in a moonboot, she spent the week as co-captain, selector, caddy, motivator and mentor — trekking over 35km through Australian bushland across the full campaign.

“Cass moved quickly past her disappointment and became an amazing leader, selector, administrator, motivator, and mentor across the campaign. She was tireless and amazing.”
— Kris Kohout, Team Manager
📷 PhotoGold medal match vs Estonia · Mundaring
📷 PhotoSilver medal ceremony · full team · Mundaring

Players

NameStatePDGA#Notes
Cassie Sweetten (Co-Captain)VIC#34655Injured before event; captained from the sideline
Patrick Robinson (Co-Captain)VIC#62059
Chris FinnWA#37970
Chris HillNSW#80785
Dave PerryVIC#116692
Alex KynastonWA#124250
Blake HoustonWA#130941
Gina HillNSW#165309
Sarah LeeACT#165310
Luke BayneQLD#166771
Rueben BergVIC#178393
Kirsten MurrayNSW#259207
Anita WeberVIC#205281
Roland WeberVIC#205283

Support staff

Team manager
Kris Kohout
Coach
To be confirmed
Selectors
To be confirmed
LOC director
Sue Summers
Co-Tournament director
Ken Summers

Final standings (top 5)

PlaceNation
🥇 1stEstonia
🥈 2ndAustralia
🥉 3rdCanada
4thNorway
🏆 Spirit AwardNew Zealand

The World Games 2025 · Chengdu, China

2025 — The World Games

Disc golf’s return to The World Games after 24 years. Blake Houston and Cassie Sweetten carried the green and gold in Chengdu.

Dates8–10 August 2025
LocationChengdu, China
Nations16
FormatMixed doubles, alternate shot
Result14th of 16
📷 Hero photoBlake Houston and Cassie Sweetten · Chengdu · The World Games 2025

Disc golf returned to The World Games for the first time in 24 years, and Australia earned their place at the table. Blake Houston and Cassie Sweetten — one of the youngest and one of the most experienced players in Australian disc golf — represented the country in a mixed doubles alternate-shot format against 15 other nations at Guixi Ecological Park in Chengdu.

Competing against the world’s best pairings, including world number ones Gannon Buhr and Missy Gannon for the USA, Australia drew with Lithuania before losing to Norway and Canada. Most rounds were shortened from 18 to 12 holes due to significant Chengdu summer heat. Australia finished 14th of 16 nations and did not advance past pool play.

The campaign mattered beyond the scoreline. Australia qualified for this event on the back of their silver medal in Perth, and being in the room — competing at a multi-sport world games alongside the sport’s best nations — is a marker of how far Australian disc golf has come since six teams gathered on a ski mountain in Vancouver in 2016.

📷 PhotoAction at Guixi Park · alternate shot format · Chengdu
📷 PhotoOpening ceremony or parade of nations · World Games 2025

Team

NameStateRole
Blake HoustonWAMale representative
Cassie SweettenVICFemale representative

Support staff

Team manager
To be confirmed
Coach
To be confirmed

Pool B results

OpponentScoreResult
Lithuania3–3Draw
Norway0–5Loss
Canada3–4Loss

Final standings (top 5 + Australia)

PlaceNation
🥇 1stUSA
🥈 2ndFinland
🥉 3rdLatvia
4thEstonia
14thAustralia

WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship · Vilnius, Lithuania

2026 — Two teams to Lithuania

For the first time ever, Australia fields both an Open team and a Masters team. The Sugar Gliders story keeps growing.

Dates9–12 September 2026
LocationVilnius, Lithuania
TeamsOpen + Masters
StatusUpcoming
Results will be added as the campaign unfolds. Follow facebook.com/adgteamaustralia for live updates from Vilnius.

The sixth edition of the WFDF World Teams Disc Golf Championship takes place at Pūčkorių Disc Golf Park in Vilnius, Lithuania. For the first time in the event’s history, Australia fields two separate teams: an Open team (MPO and FPO) and a Masters team (MP40, FP40, MP50) — the largest Australian disc golf campaign ever assembled for a single international event. Both squads are led by players who were part of the silver medal campaign in Perth, alongside fresh faces making their international debut.

Open team

NameNotes
Blake Houston (Co-Captain)
Cassie Sweetten (Co-Captain)
Alex Kynaston
Chris Hill
Clayton Beck
David Perry
Gina Hill
Kirsten Murray
Leah Manning
Luke Bayne

Masters team

NameNotes
Darren Stace-Smith (Co-Captain)
Sue Summers (Co-Captain)
Carol Hartley
Chris Finn
Chris Palazzi
Chris Scott
Joanne McCamish
Patrick Wilson
Paul Noesen
Tania Behan
Youngblood Roche

Support staff

Manager (Open)
Bryce Winchester
Manager (Masters)
Ken Summers
Coach (both teams)
Aaron Moreton
Selectors
To be confirmed