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Skyhoundz posts 2026 DiscDogathon results, spotlighting global competition

Skyhoundz’s 2026 DiscDogathon table logged 43 competitions and 4,544 entries, with results stretching from Canada to Argentina and Colombia.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Skyhoundz posts 2026 DiscDogathon results, spotlighting global competition
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Forty-three DiscDogathon competitions, 4,544 total entries, and a results table that ran from Alliston, Ontario, to Pilar, Buenos Aires, told a bigger story than placements alone. Skyhoundz updated the 2026 DiscDogathon Results page on June 9, and the page now reads like a map of how disc dogs move from local fields to championship stages across the world.

That structure matters because Skyhoundz does not run a single championship, it runs three linked tracks: DiscDogathon Championships, Skyhoundz Classic Championships, and Xtreme Distance Championships. Skyhoundz says its calendar also includes Local Championships, State Championships, qualifiers, and World Championships, with more than 100 competitions held worldwide each year and free World Championship opportunities at the end of the path. On the DiscDogathon page, the asterisk and plus symbols do real work, separating qualified runs from audited ones and turning the results into a season-long record of consistency, not just a single-day win.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The geography on the results pages is just as telling. The 2026 DiscDogathon list includes stops in Canada, Argentina, Colombia, and a long U.S. spread across Georgia, Texas, Florida, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Oklahoma, California, Ohio, and Connecticut. The 2026 Skyhoundz Classic results page adds Medellin, Colombia, and Gangwon-do, Republic of Korea, to a schedule that also runs through multiple American states. That kind of spread shows a sport stitched together by regional clubs and recurring hosts, with the same qualification ladder connecting every venue. For handlers, the benchmark is not only whether a dog can chase and catch, but whether that dog can keep doing it across formats and locations.

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Xtreme Distance makes that split even clearer. Skyhoundz describes it as a stand-alone event built around insanely long throws, pure speed, and catching ability, with men’s and women’s divisions and four classes: MicroDog, Light Plastic, Classic Plastic, and Unlimited Plastic. Put beside DiscDogathon and Classic, it shows where different canine strengths land, from jump-and-turn freestyle work to raw sprinting and throw power. The sport’s infrastructure also comes from inside the culture itself: Hyperflite was founded in 2000 by Peter Bloeme and Jeff Perry, both World Champions with their own dogs, and Skyhoundz says its 2013 world championship was the largest and best-attended canine disc competition in the sport’s history. The 2026 results page makes that lineage visible again, one qualified placement at a time.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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Skyhoundz posts 2026 DiscDogathon results, spotlighting global competition | Prism News