The Discraft Athena is a 7-speed stable fairway driver. With published flight numbers of 7 / 5 / 0 / 2, it is most often described as suited for straight-to-stable control drives from 275–325ft, tight wooded fairways that punish early fade.
Overview
The Discraft Athena is a 7-speed fairway driver rated 7/5/0/2 and the sixth disc in Paul McBeth's signature line.[1][3] It is an all-purpose fairway driver with a light end-fade: thrown with moderate to full power it holds a very straight line before a predictable finishing fade.[1][3] McBeth describes it as his 'go to driver for straight to stable control shots,' adding that as a 7-speed 'it can handle the power of top throwers but also allows great control and distance for even the newest of players.'[1]
Flight characteristics
Flight numbers describe the published behavior of the disc when thrown at its design speed. Real-world flight varies with plastic, weight, age, and thrower power. The community-averaged numbers above reflect crowd-sourced observations from real throws — typically slightly more understable than the manufacturer's published values, which is the most consistent pattern across nearly every commercial mold.
Recommended uses
The Athena is a control-slot workhorse: straight drives in the 275–325ft range, tight wooded lines where its trusted late fade keeps the disc on the fairway, and general TeeBird-style duties for players who bag Discraft.[3][4] Its neutral flight makes it forgiving for newer players while retaining enough stability for power throwers.[1][3] The first runs came in grippy, durable ESP; Big Z and Z versions followed for players who prefer a stiffer, translucent plastic.[1][4]
Best for:
- Straight-to-stable control drives from 275–325ft
- Tight wooded fairways that punish early fade
- The TeeBird slot in an all-Discraft bag
- A reliable first fairway driver for developing players
Community notes — how players actually use this disc
Plastics & variants
The Athena is available in the following plastic blends from Discraft:[1]
ESP, Big Z, Z
Plastic blend significantly affects flight character. Premium plastics like Champion, Z, or C-Line generally fly more overstable when fresh and hold their stability over time. Base plastics like DX, Pro, or Active beat in faster and become more understable workhorses with use.
History
The Athena was PDGA-approved on August 1, 2022 (certification 22-132) and released later that year as the sixth disc in Discraft's Paul McBeth signature series.[2][3] McBeth pitched it as filling a specific hole in the lineup: 'I think Discraft has the most underrated fairway drivers in disc golf but they do have a small pocket missing that the Athena is going to fill perfectly.'[1] Reviewers quickly slotted it alongside neutral-stable fairway classics like the Latitude 64 Explorer and Innova TeeBird, giving Discraft players a dependable straight 7-speed without reaching for another brand.[3]
Notable throwers
Paul McBeth
Similar discs
- Latitude 64 Explorer · 7/5/0/2
- Innova Teebird · 7/5/0/2
- Latitude 64 Saint · 9/7/-1/2
References & further reading
- How to read disc golf flight numbers — Discpedia primer
- PDGA Approved Disc List — search for "Athena" to find the Discraft Athena entry (PDGA-approved 2022)
- Discraft official site — manufacturer product page
Sources
Content on this page has been cross-checked against the following sources. Numbered citations in the prose above link to the matching entry here.
- Paul McBeth Athena Driver — Discraft (official product page)
- Athena — PDGA Equipment Certification (approved 2022-08-01, cert 22-132)
- Discraft Athena Review — Disc Golf Reviewer
- Discraft McBeth Athena — Fairway Driver — 1010 Discs
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