Disc Battle of the Day: Innova Dragon vs Innova Whippet
Two Innova fairway workhorses, two very different flights. The Innova Dragon promises easy distance and workable lines, while the Innova Whippet is a control-first meat hook. Here’s how their numbers translate to real shots and who should bag which.
Quick Flight Numbers

Innova Dragon
Speed8
Glide5
Turn-2
Fade2

Innova Whippet
Speed6
Glide3
Turn1
Fade5
Innova Dragon
Pros
- Speed 8 with Glide 5 gives effortless carry for developing arms and smooth distance for veterans.
- Turn -2 makes hyzer-flips and gentle turnover lines easy to shape on wooded fairways.
- Moderate Fade 2 offers controllable finishes without dumpy hooks, keeping you center-fairway.
- Great step-up from mids when you need more push but still want forgiveness on nose-angle.
Cons
- Understable high-speed phase (-2 turn) can burn over in headwinds or with torquey forehands.
- Fade 2 may be too soft if you rely on hard, predictable finishes or skip shots.
- Power throwers might need extra hyzer or risk long, late-turn misses.
Innova Whippet
Pros
- Brutally reliable: Turn 1 and Fade 5 produce board-flat flights that finish hard every time.
- Low Glide 3 resists wind lift, ideal for spikes, flex lines, and safe, short landing zones.
- Excels for forehand control where torque resistance and a dumpy finish are essential.
- Perfect utility slot for forced fades, skip shots, and get-out-of-trouble punch-outs.
Cons
- Speed 6 with Glide 3 sacrifices distance; it’s about placement, not pushing fairways.
- In calm conditions the early fade can leave you short if you don’t aim wide.
- Beginners may find the overstability unforgiving on flat releases.
Head-to-Head
- Distance shaping: Choose Dragon for hyzer-flips and turnovers; pick Whippet for spike hyzers and hard-fade placements.
- Wind: Dragon favors tailwinds and calm; Whippet is the headwind and crosswind specialist.
- Forehand: Dragon suits touch flicks; Whippet handles torque and delivers consistent dumpy finishes.
- Woods: Dragon threads long glidey lines; Whippet carves overstable checkpoints and controlled skips.
- Player skill: Newer arms benefit from Dragon’s forgiveness; experienced players leverage Whippet as a utility hammer.
Verdict
If you want easy distance, workable hyzer-flips, and forgiving finishes, the Innova Dragon (8 | 5 | -2 | 2) is your fairway of choice. If you need a wind-beating, torque-resistant tool that fades every time, the Innova Whippet (6 | 3 | 1 | 5) is the dependable utility driver. Many bags will benefit from carrying both: Dragon for push and shaping, Whippet for control and insurance.