Who Will Win World’s 2025?

Disc Golf World Champion and the favorite for 2025

So, here we are again. Worlds 2025 is about to kick off in Nokia and Tampere, Finland, and all the questions are the same: Who will win disc golf worlds? Which player has the best shot? What are the odds to win Worlds 2025? I’ve dug into the StatMando rankings, PDGA official standings, DGPT form, player ratings, and last-minute momentum shifts to pull together a richer, deeper breakdown than your standard fantasy disc golf preview.

Setting the Stage: Worlds 2025 in Finland

This year’s Worlds will be contested across two legendary layouts: the Beast course at Nokia DiscGolfPark and the Monster course at Tampere Disc Golf Center. Finnish terrain, wind, tight woods, and aggressive drives all collide—creating a crucible where experience, power, and course IQ matter.

Composite Rankings & Recent Form

Let’s break down the numbers:

  • StatMando Official MPO Rankings: Gannon Buhr holds the top position, with Anthony Barela and Calvin Heimburg also near the summit. StatMando’s Official rankings span a two-year performance window.
  • StatMando Power Rankings: Heimburg and Buhr sit at the top, signaling those most “on fire” right now. Anthony Barela follows closely.
  • PDGA World Rankings (July 2025): Gannon Buhr leads, followed by Ricky Wysocki at #2, and Isaac Robinson at #3.
  • DGPT World Standings: Buhr has led multiple Elite Series events (Preserve, Northwest Championship, etc.) and tops the DGPT MPO standings heading into Worlds.

Profiling the Top Contenders

Gannon Buhr – The Statistical Juggernaut

At just 20 years old, Buhr’s already reached a level others take a decade to hit: 1058 PDGA rating as of July 8, 2025, with 49 career wins and over $480K in earnings. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6} He’s fired off multiple final-rounds north of 1080, won the Memorial Championship, Northwest DGPT+ Championship, and the Preserve Championship—all in 2025.

In tournaments like the European Disc Golf Festival, he erased a five‑stroke deficit to tie Isaac Robinson and claim the lead late into the weekend. He’s more than just power; he’s delivering clutch golf on big stages.

Composite consensus: Concrete stats, razor focus, rising win counting. Buhr is the smart-money favorite to win Worlds 2025.

Isaac Robinson – Going for Three Straight

Robinson enters as the two-time defending PDGA World Champion and is widely discussed as the frontrunner for a historic three‑peat. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9} He captured the Champions Cup title earlier this season, sealing it in a dramatic finale. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}

On European soil, his second round at the European Disc Golf Festival was an insane 1101-rated -15, slicing through the field and announcing he’s still elite. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11} With his calm touch and winning experience, Robinson’s mental edge is formidable.

Ricky Wysocki – The Veteran Warrior

Wysocki is ranked #2 in both PDGA and StatMando systems. He’s a multiple-time Preserve Championship winner and has posted stellar displays at both the DGPT and DGPT+ levels.  Despite his long career, he’s still fighting uphill—Europe travel, wood-lined holes—but remains one of the toughest competitors on the planet.

Paul McBeth – Rainmaker on Sunday

Six-time Worlds champ. Enough said? Even if McBeth hasn’t posted his best 2025 stats—he once fired a course-record 1108-rated final round to surge into contention at EDGF—he’s always a factor when pressure peaks.  His experience and grit make him a blueprint for veteran grit at PDGA’s biggest events.

Calvin Heimburg – Momentum on Full Throttle

Heimburg sits at #5 in Official StatMando and #2 in Power Rankings, riding consistent recent success including a victory at the European Disc Golf Festival. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14} His driving distance pairs with steady putting—if circle one stays in play, he’s a top-5 threat on pace with the leaders.

Anthony Barela – Youth Meets Railgun Distance

Barela is StatMando Official #2, with multiple top‑five finishes and runner-up rides behind Buhr in key tournaments like the Memorial and Preserve.  At only 21, he throws bombs and now has enough experience to challenge consistently. High upside, some volatility—but the kind of profile that suggests the occasional breakout Worlds weekend.

Dark Horse Watch

Never forget the legends of yore—like Greg Barsby—who turned up unheralded and ripped eight strokes off elite fields. This year, prospects include Europeans comfortable with wind and woods (think Niklas Anttila or Linus Carlsson), both comfortable on Finnish courses and capable of peak scoring on a hot day. Keep your eyes open for someone hitting a groove early and staying in it.

Fantasy Odds Table – Who Will Win Worlds 2025?

Rank Player Estimated Win Odds
1 Gannon Buhr 25%
2 Isaac Robinson 18%
3 Ricky Wysocki 14%
4 Calvin Heimburg 12%
5 Anthony Barela 8%
6 Paul McBeth 7%
7 Niklas Anttila 4%
8 Eagle McMahon 3%
9 Linus Carlsson 3%
10 Dark Horse (TBD) 6%

Why These Odds?

These odds reflect a blend of ranking data (StatMando, PDGA), current form (Power Rankings, major wins), historical major experience, putting under pressure, and course fit. Buhr leads nearly every metric, making his 25% favorite status defensible. Robinson’s historic potential and clutch record earn him a close second. Wysocki and McBeth are eyeballed as veteran threats. Heimburg and Barela combine recent wins with rising PoY momentum.

Deep Dive: Supporting Evidence

  • At the DGPT Preserve Championship, Wysocki has nearly single-handedly owned that track—four titles in five years. Buhr has yet to podium there, but finished top‑10 consistently. Barela nearly beat Buhr to the win in May.
  • At EDGF in Europe, Buhr posted 14‑under on Final Day to erase a deficit to Robinson and secure a share of the lead. Heimburg was one stroke back with a 12‑under round; McBeth fired an unreal 16‑under that earned a 1108‑rating.
  • Robinson’s 1101-rated round at EDGF proves he’s capable of scoring weekend lines in Europe’s windier, risk‑reward conditions.
  • The Champions Cup major showed Robinson and Buhr trading strokes in a high-pressure final pairing—experience that matters heading into Worlds.

Who Will Win Worlds

If you’re asking, Who will win disc golf worlds? or checking the latest Odds to Win Worlds 2025, the short answer is: Gannon Buhr is the statistical favorite, Isaac Robinson is the defending champ with three‑peat potential, and Ricky Wysocki or Calvin Heimburg can’t be counted out. Paul McBeth lives for these moments. Anthony Barela brings sky‑high upside. And, as ever at Worlds, a dark horse may steal the headlines.

Final Thoughts

So what are your picks for the Odds to Win Worlds 2025? While Gannon Buhr stands tallest on every ranking sheet, Isaac Robinson’s historic momentum makes him a powerful challenger. Veterans like Ricky and Paul always bring Sunday potential. Heimburg and Barela offer the young-wind variance that leads to explosive rounds. And remember: any player locked in with a putter over five rounds in Finland could become the next surprise legend.

Worlds isn’t just a test—it’s a spectacle. Let me know if you’d like player head‑to‑head breakdowns, round-by-round predictions, or a short teaser you can share on social.

Photo Credit: DGPT

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