If your midrange shots keep fading out hard left (for a right-handed backhand thrower) and dropping short of the basket, the problem usually isn't your form — it's that the disc is too overstable for the arm speed you're throwing it with. This guide walks through the five best understable midranges for developing players and explains how to choose between them.
Why beginners need understable discs
Disc flight ratings assume you're throwing the disc at the speed it was designed for. A stable midrange thrown at full pro speed flies straight and fades gently. The same disc thrown at half that speed acts overstable — it fades early and drops out of the air before reaching its potential distance.
An understable midrange compensates for lower arm speed. The disc's natural tendency to turn right counteracts the early fade, so the flight stays straighter for longer at moderate power. As your form develops, you can either throw the same disc on hyzer (it flips up to flat) or graduate to a more stable midrange.