Black Hole Pro Team

Black Hole Pro Team




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Black Hole Pro Team

Specifications

6.5 cm Galvanized Powder Coated Steel Header
1 cm thick durable all-metal basket wires
12 outer chains, 12 outer-middle chains, 6 inner-middle chains, and 6 inner chains — on 4 independent rings
36 hot-dipped galvanized steel chains
Cage depth: 23.8cm
Cage diameter: 68.8
Band/Chain diameter: 57.5
Maximum size of basket gaps: 16.4cm
Height above ground: 83.7cm
Target zone height: 49.5cm
Width of pole: 4.8cm
Sturdy all-metal construction, all joints welded
Available with matching cage colors in Red, Yellow, Orange, and Black
PDGA Championship Approved
Covered by 20-year limited warranty





© 2022 MVP Disc Sports
mvp@mvpdiscsports.com
844-MVP-DISC (687-3472)
6599 Euclid St, Marlette, MI 48453


The crown jewel of MVP’s basket research, the enhanced Portal is here to change the disc golf basket game entirely. With 36 strands of hot-dipped galvanized steel chain — 12 outer, 12 outer-middle, 6 inner-middle, and 6 inner — on 4 independent rings, the Portal provides unparalleled catching ability. The independent ring design gives the Portal elite marks in kinetic energy dispersion — leading to a basket that catches spin, push, hard, and soft putts with ease. Firm putts will not cut through. Soft putts won’t be spit out by initial chain resistance. Simply put, this is the best catching basket on the market. Plus, with a universal locking tab position, MVP baskets are now extremely easy to install on market standard sleeves — installing an MVP basket on your course has never been easier! Available with matching cage colors in Red, Yellow, and Orange, and the classic Black top and silver cage as well, the Portal will look extremely stylish on any course. On top of all of that, the Portal also comes with a 20-year limited warranty, with our amazing customer service staff available to put your mind at ease. Discover what the official basket of Maple Hill – the World’s Best Disc Golf Course – is all about with an enhanced Portal basket!
Features 36 strands of hot-dipped galvanized steel chains to maximize disc catching ability
All metal construction with all joints welded for durable long-term use
The Black Hole® Portal is covered by a Limited 20-Year Warranty and guaranteed against failure due to rust/corrosion and manufacturer defects. Circumstances beyond MVP’s control and therefore not covered include but are not limited to vandalism, unauthorized repair, acts of God, powder coat and logo chipping/scratching/ discoloration. Warranty requests should be made directly to mvp@mvpdiscsports.com, and resolution by repair or replacement will be at MVP’s sole discretion. Labor including but not limited to removal/installation is not covered under this warranty, and shipping for unsolicited returns will be the sole responsibility of the owner. Please contact mvp@mvpdiscsports.com with any questions about the Black Hole® Portal Limited 20-Year Warranty.
MVP Next Tee Arrows – Easily attached to the Black Hole basket cages, provides directions and added customization to your course with the matte powder coated metal arrow.
MVP Pad Locks – Available in packs of nine, each with a unique set of keys.
Organize your tournament or league round with the MVP Tournament Scoreboard.
The enhanced Gravity is here to upgrade your local course! Benefitting from MVP’s intense research and development process, the Gravity may be more cost-effective, but it offers a premium catching experience that is at the top of its class. With...


March 23, 2022
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December 13, 2021
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August 18, 2021
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© 2022 MVP Disc Sports
mvp@mvpdiscsports.com
844-MVP-DISC (687-3472)
6599 Euclid St, Marlette, MI 48453


See a full line-up of our discs and see why we are the leader in Disc Golf technology.
Baskets for professional courses and your own at home practice.
Disc Golf bags designed for the professionals and beginners alike.
The MVP Rover Cart is ready to begin exploration, and with all your gear on board!
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Sports | PRO FOOTBALL; The Black Hole: For Raiders Fans, So Good It's Scary
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PRO FOOTBALL; The Black Hole: For Raiders Fans, So Good It's Scary
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The first cars begin peeling off Hegenberger Road at 6 a.m., black sports utility vehicles rolling through a black mist toward this concrete house of worship. The parking lot gates open at 8:30 a.m. at Network Associates Coliseum, and the first match is thrown on the grill at 8:31, sending a billow of smoke above the home of the Oakland Raiders, smoke that will soon cover the skies above one of the loudest football stadiums in the National Football League.
In Lot C, a drummer for the local band Raiderhed checks the amplifier for the morning set. Fans emerge from their vehicles, a man dressed in a black Santa Claus costume, a man dressed as Darth Vader, and another with silver spikes coming out of his shoulders.
In front of every car, there is a grill. On almost every fan, there is the color black.
''It's pretty insane,'' said Michael Maysonet, who is known around these parts as StonerDude, a Raiders fan since the early 1980's and a drummer for Raiderhed. ''It's a very unique vibe that I haven't seen anywhere else.''
More than 60,000 fans are expected to pass through this veil of smoke Sunday to express their devotion to the Raiders (11-5) and their animus toward the Jets (10-7), who will be making their fourth trip here in 20 games. The teams will be playing for the right to advance to the American Football Conference championship game, one stop short of Super Bowl XXXVII.
Depending on whom you ask, the culture of the Raiders fan is either one of a heathen or simply of a devoted backer whose bark is worse than his bite.
Some of the Raiders' outlaw image seems to have been fostered by Al Davis, the team's owner. He, too, prefers black. Davis has had lengthy battles in court with the N.F.L. over stadium issues and his moving of the franchise from Oakland to Los Angeles and back to Oakland, the latest move coming in 1995.
''I think he gets ridiculed too much in that aspect,'' Raiders running back Randy Jordan said recently of Davis's maverick image. ''He's just like a Jerry Jones or any other owner in the league. They want to win Super Bowls, and he's willing to do anything and everything to get that done.''
Some fans of the Raiders -- whose team logo is a helmeted player wearing an eye patch, two crossed swords behind him -- have adopted that image. Network Associates Coliseum is one of the toughest places for a team to play because of the volume and, occasionally, some extracurricular activities.
The highest point of the stadium has been dubbed Mount Davis, where fans on the east side of the stadium sit (or stand) in rows from sections 335 to 355, yelling down from on high. The south end zone is known as The Black Hole. The fans dress only in black and have been known to distract the opposing team by any means necessary.
''Batteries, chicken bones, coins, you name it,'' Jets center Kevin Mawae said of the items he has dodged. ''I've had it all. You just hope you don't get backed up, and when you do, you keep your helmet on.''
San Francisco 49ers Coach Steve Mariucci said the verbal barbs were almost as pointed as the vulgar gestures that greeted his team's arrival at the stadium..
''They are verbalizing about your mother and your brother and your sister, your girlfriend, all during the warm-ups,'' Mariucci told The San Francisco Chronicle this season. ''What are you going to do? Charge the mound?''
Rory Martíon, a fan from Sacramento, says fans of the opposing team have learned to keep their opinions to themselves.
''I went to the Broncos game in Oakland a couple of years ago, and the Broncos won and it was pretty ugly,'' Martíon said. ''If there were any Broncos fan around, they were very quiet.''
In some ways, fans of opposing teams have been conditioned to take a low profile. When the Raiders played in Los Angeles, a 35-year-old Steelers fan was beaten unconscious at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in a game won by the Raiders, 20-3. The stain from the incident has never left Raiders fans.
''L.A. is a dangerous place, period,'' said Maysonet, who grew up in Southern California before moving to the Bay Area in 1997. ''When the Raiders were in L.A., I wouldn't go see a game because it was in the area of all of the gang activity. Here you're talking hippies, yuppies, mixed cultures. It's very progressive and liberal. Just because they're wearing those colors, people stigmatize them with Los Angeles.''
Oakland police Sgt. Tom Hogenmiller is one of about 240 officers who work security on game days at the coliseum. They work in concert with the Alameda County Sheriff's Department and several other emergency service units (some 200 contracted security guards are also present).
Despite a reputation for fan rowdiness, game days are smooth-running operations, according to Hogenmiller, and the fans in black paint and outfits mugging for the television cameras are among the best behaved.
''These guys that dress up in costumes, we know who these guys are,'' Hogenmiller said. ''They like to be seen on TV. Darth Vader in the end zone? He's never caused any trouble.''
Hogenmiller estimated that there were 20 to 30 arrests at each Raiders home game.
''Our problem isn't with the people who are painted up,'' he said. ''They're not season-ticket holders. They're the fans who come once a year and they start using foul language. Those are the individuals we have problems with. The majority of negative contacts we have are due to intoxication, just like any other place in the world, just like a soccer match in England.''
Jordan admitted that the fans' costumes and volume give a boost to the Raiders, who have home-field advantage for as long as they are in the A.F.C. playoffs.
''It's hard to describe our fans,'' Jordan said. ''My wife came home from shopping one day and said a guy standing behind her in line was like, 'You're not by any chance Randy Jordan's wife, are you?' She was like, 'Yes, that's my husband.'
''He was like, 'I'm the guy that sits in the seats all painted up. I'm a schoolteacher.' ''
From teachers to artists to police officers, it all adds to the scene here. Right tackle Lincoln Kennedy said nothing warmed him more than to look into the crowd and see nothing but black.
Jets receiver Laveranues Coles said he did not get the same lift after a woman's vulgar gesture during last month's 26-20 loss to the Raiders.
''An old lady, she looked like she was about 80-something years old,'' Coles said.
Bruce Allen, the Raiders' senior assistant, said, ''That was probably my mother.''

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