View Full Version : GAPS in your Golf Game? (Free Lesson!)
BrianL99
04-08-2025, 05:23 PM
I hit balls at the range, most every day. I usually play 4-5 times a week at a Championship Course.
Every day at the range, I see husbands trying to teach their wives how to swing. Friends giving lessons to friends. Invariably, the teacher only marginally knows more than the student. I watched a guy today, coaching & teaching his wife or GF. He couldn't hit 3 balls in a row in the air. His wife was a newbie, but had a swing that would make Nelly Korda jealous. With some decent instruction or coaching, the lady would be a single-digit handicap in 2 months. With her husband teacher her, she'll probably give up golf out of frustration.
I've been shooting in the mid-70's for 40 years. I'm a 4.6 Index now and play from the Blue Tees. I also oversaw an operation that had a Rick Smith Golf Academy and later, a Bobby Clampett Impact Zone school. There are probably a 1,000,000 people who know more about the golf swing than I do, but I know a little. What I do know, is how to get the golf ball around the golf course, in a reasonable amount of strokes (usually).
G is for Grip
A is for Alignment
P is for Posture
S is for Set up (Ball position, distance from the ball & the consistency those things)
Very few recreational or even average golfers, need a huge amount of "swing advice".
What most need, is information and coaching on the basics. There is almost no "swing flaw" that can't be corrected organically, by changing or adjusting, one of the above. My swing plane got out of whack. I took a swing lesson via video last week, with Ryan Mouque in Australia. A simple change in spine angle corrected the issue in10 minutes (at least for now).
Everyone's body is different and works differently. That said, most everyone has a grip, alignment, posture & setup, that will allow them to swing fairly naturally and hit the ball, reasonably straight and reasonable well. Find it. Most "swing flaws" can be traced back to an issue with your "GAPS".
Did you take a bunch of lessons to learn to tie your shoes? Sign your name? Slice a loaf of bread? Walk? Throw a baseball? No. You figured out what naturally worked for you and it may be way different than the way someone else does it, but if it works for you who cares? Bryson DeChambeau doesn't swing anything like Rory McIlroy, but they both play pretty well.
Once you can swing naturally and make decent contact, there's only course management left to vastly improve your game. Let's face it, none of us are going to be playing in The Masters this week. We don't need to know how PGA Tour players do it. I know quite a few guys who play on Tour and trust me, they are all "freaks of nature" when it comes to hitting a golf ball (& usually other sports, too). We only need simple & basic.
If you only want to have fun and be able to break 90 on a regular basis, that's all it takes. Stop playing "golf swing" and especially stop trying to teach your wife or friends, "golf swing". If I see one more guy who can't break 90, showing his wife where her golf club should be a at the top, I'm going to say something. Help them with the basics if you must, but make sure you know what you're doing.
There is plenty of online advice. Try Rick Shiels, Danny Maude, Aimee Cho or even George Gankas.
If you prefer books, find these on Amazon, cheap ... they're all old and you can buy used copies for a couple of bucks.
The LAWS of the Golf Swing: 1998: by Jim Suttie, Mike Adams, and T.J. Tomasi
Play Your Best Golf All the Time. 1953: by Tommy Armour
Impact Zone. 2007: by Bobby Clampett
Understanding the Golf Swing. 2001: Manuel De LA Torre
Do not read Ben Hogan's "5 Easy Lessons" or Jack Nicklaus' "Golf My Way". Both great golfers, but Trackman & High Speed Video, have proven they didn't really know how or why what they were doing, worked so well.
rustyp
04-08-2025, 05:47 PM
Are you married ? Once ?
asianthree
04-08-2025, 06:25 PM
Are you married ? Once ?
Best response or reality check ever
jimhoward
04-08-2025, 07:26 PM
I have taken several hundred lessons. Videos, motion sensors on my body, cameras from every angle. Pros with different styles. If you looked at my swing you would think I was a very good player. But i am a 17 index and struggle to break 90 and probably always will. My career best is 78 which I’ve done exactly twice in 20 years. Meanwhile I know lots of guys with quirky swings that whip my butt every day of the week.
It’s not all about the swing.
BrianL99
04-08-2025, 07:51 PM
I have taken several hundred lessons. Videos, motion sensors on my body, cameras from every angle. Pros with different styles. If you looked at my swing you would think I was a very good player. But i am a 17 index and struggle to break 90 and probably always will. My career best is 78 which I’ve done exactly twice in 20 years. Meanwhile I know lots of guys with quirky swings that whip my butt every day of the week.
It’s not all about the swing.
I watched a guy on the range today, who looked like he got his swing as the free gift, in a box of Cracker Jacks. It was awful. It was perfect in the Impact Zone. He hit every ball dead straight. Could drive it 175 or so. Could easily shoot in the 70's, with good course management & decent putting.
shut the front door
04-09-2025, 07:28 AM
I watched a guy on the range today, who looked like he got his swing as the free gift, in a box of Cracker Jacks. It was awful. It was perfect in the Impact Zone. He hit every ball dead straight. Could drive it 175 or so. Could easily shoot in the 70's, with good course management & decent putting.
Was it Charles Barkley?
BrianL99
04-09-2025, 08:49 AM
I have taken several hundred lessons. Videos, motion sensors on my body, cameras from every angle. Pros with different styles. If you looked at my swing you would think I was a very good player. But i am a 17 index and struggle to break 90 and probably always will. My career best is 78 which I’ve done exactly twice in 20 years. Meanwhile I know lots of guys with quirky swings that whip my butt every day of the week.
It’s not all about the swing.
My entire point, but you were able to reduce it to 6 words.
For the average golfer, it has nothing to do with the "swing". When's the last time you saw someone hit a golf ball with his backswing? It's all about what the club is doing in the 6" before it hits the ball and the inch or 2, after.
For the average golfer, It's all about moving the ball forward in a reasonably consistent direction, aimed at a target that will keep you out of trouble.
Unfortunately, every teacher seems to want to teach a "golf swing", instead of how to play golf.
UpNorth
04-09-2025, 01:59 PM
Moe Norman had a horrible looking swing, but made it work by hitting countless balls on the range till his hands bled. Always believed he had the "perfect" swing, but it doesn't work for everybody. You can go on YouTube and see some interesting alternative swing techniques (Jim Venetos, Marcus Adberg, channel-lock and others). They all work because the ball doesn't care what your swing looks like. But if several things are wrong, you can never hope to deliver the clubhead properly for a good shot. Try everything until you find out what works for you.
BrianL99
04-09-2025, 04:21 PM
But if several things are wrong, you can never hope to deliver the clubhead properly for a good shot. Try everything until you find out what works for you.
"Several things" can be "wrong" with your GAPS, but they all lead to the same, exact place. Contact (swing path/club face alignment) are the only things that affect what the ball does.
Manuel de La Torre was one of the greatest instructors ever. He preached "the ball flight tells you everything".
With the advent of Trackman and especially, the Foresight Sports GCQuad, we learned that what Manuel said, is true. Ball flight tells you everything you need to know about impact and therefore, your swing.
Old Traveller
04-09-2025, 05:03 PM
It's been my observation since moving to the Villages and playing golf, that the seniors I play with are so stiff, or is it more appropriate to say, inflexible. I suggest a few simple stretches for their hamstrings or back muscles and I hear, "it hurts, I can't do them". They constantly lift their heads before hitting the ball. They do this because of their inflexibility. I am a big believer in the basics, and GAPS is certainly important, but how do you get these golfers to do simple stretches?
BrianL99
04-09-2025, 05:17 PM
It's been my observation since moving to the Villages and playing golf, that the seniors I play with are so stiff, or is it more appropriate to say, inflexible. I suggest a few simple stretches for their hamstrings or back muscles and I hear, "it hurts, I can't do them". They constantly lift their heads before hitting the ball. They do this because of their inflexibility. I am a big believer in the basics, and GAPS is certainly important, but how do you get these golfers to do simple stretches?
We may be saying the same thing, but ...
I have hardly ever seen a player "lift his head". I've heard on the golf course, at least 42,000 times ... "oh, you lifted your head".
Most of the time, something in your Posture or Setup, caused your head to move.
& before someone says, "he looked up to watch his ball" ... that's usually incorrect in my opinion. Everyone's inclination is to keep their eye on the ball until they hit it. Common sense.
You "turn" your head to watch your ball, not move it "up". Annika Sorenstam was famous for following the ball with her head. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzKbz7z76BY
JustSomeGuy
04-09-2025, 06:03 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFwz9o5QWzg
Hank Haney free simple basics....
Any book by Harvey Penick (even one just for women). Simple, no gimmicks. Gets average golfer to enjoy game more without gadgets.... old school. You can find them as free PDF's on line too....
example - quote little red book...harvey Penick = A 5-foot putt counts one stroke, the same as a 270-yard drive, but the putt may be much more significant to your score.
Psychologically, the driver is very important. If you hit your tee ball well, it fills you with confidence. On the other hand, if you smash a couple of drives into the trees, your confidence can be shaken.
But nothing is more important psychologically than knocking putts into the hole. Sinking putts makes your confidence soar, and it devastates your opponent.
A good putter is a match for anyone. A bad putter is a match for no one.
The woods are full of long drivers.
Simple free tips to get the basics right so you can find your own swing without starting with no guidance.... Takes a long time for a new player to think about clubface being slightly open or closed...
BrianL99
04-09-2025, 07:24 PM
example - quote little red book...harvey Penick = A 5-foot putt counts one stroke, the same as a 270-yard drive, but the putt may be much more significant to your score.
.
The statistics say otherwise. Putting is responsible for about 15% of your scoring differential from a PGA Tour Player.
Psychologically, the driver is very important. If you hit your tee ball well, it fills you with confidence. On the other hand, if you smash a couple of drives into the trees, your confidence can be shaken.
The above is a quote from Harvey Penick. Penick died in 1995. Way before TrackMan and ShotLink. Psychologically, the driver probably isn't any more important than any other club. Why should it be? On a Par 4 you have 3 more shots to get it in the hole. On a Par 5, you have 4 more shots. The odds are, if you make ONE good shot, you can make Par. If you know anything about course management, you can make a Bogey with 5 lousy shots. A poor drive is generally the easiest mistake to recover from.
There are very few courses in TV, with "woods" to smash it into. Other than on TDS, where I've lost 2 balls in the woods, it hasn't happen to me in TV in 300+ rounds. I play "tree lined" courses most every day I'm not in TV. I can't remember the last time I "smashed a couple of drives into the woods".
But nothing is more important psychologically than knocking putts into the hole. Sinking putts makes your confidence soar, and it devastates your opponent.
A good putter is a match for anyone. A bad putter is a match for no one.
The woods are full of long drivers.
Simple free tips to get the basics right so you can find your own swing without starting with no guidance
Exactly the type of advice that's dispensed at the Driving Range, which in my opinion, is reason that golfers don't improve. BTW, out of 193 Players on the PGA Tour in 2023, Scottie Sheffler ranked 163rd in Putting. He won $23,000,000. How important is putting?
Takes a long time for a new player to think about clubface being slightly open or closed...
A new player should learn what the club face does and why, before he evens learns to hold it. If you don't understand what the hitting implement does and why ... how will you ever learn how to use it?
When's the last time you shot even par from 6000+ yards?
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 05:12 AM
For those of you who think Putting is so damn important, here's a practical test you can try, the next time you play golf.
Give yourself, EVERY putt that's within the length of your Putter (36"). In The Villages, most everyone does that, anyway.
For putts between 3' - 8', give yourself ONE of them. Putt the rest, keeping the above in mind.
Your score at the end of the day, will be what it would be, if a PGA Tour Player was doing your putting.
[Statistically, PGA Tour Pros make about 95% of their 3' putts and 50% of their 8' putts. Amateurs make about 40% of their 8' putts.)
I bet you your score won't improve as much as you think.
What's that prove? Your putting is likely no where near as bad as you think it is and improved putting is not the way to lower scores. At best, you're likely to improve a couple of strokes. Big deal. So you shoot 94 instead of 97?
darkim
04-10-2025, 05:42 AM
I partially agree with your comment. On the other hand, I follow a few young YouTube golf influencers who are in their 20’s, they golf everyday and have the best equipment and access to top trainers. Still they can’t keep it in the fairway. On the other hand … I play with more seniors who hit fairways and green in regulation. One guy had the smoothest swing like Fred Couples. He said 2 count back, 2 count forward. It was beautiful to watch him play.
GpaVader
04-10-2025, 06:57 AM
My golf instructor told me that most people have LOFT
Lack Of F#&*ing Talent
MX rider
04-10-2025, 07:09 AM
My golf instructor told me that most people have LOFT
Lack Of F#&*ing Talent
Me and my golf buddies use that phrase about our game as well. lol
MX rider
04-10-2025, 07:13 AM
I hit balls at the range, most every day. I usually play 4-5 times a week at a Championship Course.
Every day at the range, I see husbands trying to teach their wives how to swing. Friends giving lessons to friends. Invariably, the teacher only marginally knows more than the student. I watched a guy today, coaching & teaching his wife or GF. He couldn't hit 3 balls in a row in the air. His wife was a newbie, but had a swing that would make Nelly Korda jealous. With some decent instruction or coaching, the lady would be a single-digit handicap in 2 months. With her husband teacher her, she'll probably give up golf out of frustration.
I've been shooting in the mid-70's for 40 years. I'm a 4.6 Index now and play from the Blue Tees. I also oversaw an operation that had a Rick Smith Golf Academy and later, a Bobby Clampett Impact Zone school. There are probably a 1,000,000 people who know more about the golf swing than I do, but I know a little. What I do know, is how to get the golf ball around the golf course, in a reasonable amount of strokes (usually).
G is for Grip
A is for Alignment
P is for Posture
S is for Set up (Ball position, distance from the ball & the consistency those things)
Very few recreational or even average golfers, need a huge amount of "swing advice".
What most need, is information and coaching on the basics. There is almost no "swing flaw" that can't be corrected organically, by changing or adjusting, one of the above. My swing plane got out of whack. I took a swing lesson via video last week, with Ryan Mouque in Australia. A simple change in spine angle corrected the issue in10 minutes (at least for now).
Everyone's body is different and works differently. That said, most everyone has a grip, alignment, posture & setup, that will allow them to swing fairly naturally and hit the ball, reasonably straight and reasonable well. Find it. Most "swing flaws" can be traced back to an issue with your "GAPS".
Did you take a bunch of lessons to learn to tie your shoes? Sign your name? Slice a loaf of bread? Walk? Throw a baseball? No. You figured out what naturally worked for you and it may be way different than the way someone else does it, but if it works for you who cares? Bryson DeChambeau doesn't swing anything like Rory McIlroy, but they both play pretty well.
Once you can swing naturally and make decent contact, there's only course management left to vastly improve your game. Let's face it, none of us are going to be playing in The Masters this week. We don't need to know how PGA Tour players do it. I know quite a few guys who play on Tour and trust me, they are all "freaks of nature" when it comes to hitting a golf ball (& usually other sports, too). We only need simple & basic.
If you only want to have fun and be able to break 90 on a regular basis, that's all it takes. Stop playing "golf swing" and especially stop trying to teach your wife or friends, "golf swing". If I see one more guy who can't break 90, showing his wife where her golf club should be a at the top, I'm going to say something. Help them with the basics if you must, but make sure you know what you're doing.
There is plenty of online advice. Try Rick Shiels, Danny Maude, Aimee Cho or even George Gankas.
If you prefer books, find these on Amazon, cheap ... they're all old and you can buy used copies for a couple of bucks.
The LAWS of the Golf Swing: 1998: by Jim Suttie, Mike Adams, and T.J. Tomasi
Play Your Best Golf All the Time. 1953: by Tommy Armour
Impact Zone. 2007: by Bobby Clampett
Understanding the Golf Swing. 2001: Manuel De LA Torre
Do not read Ben Hogan's "5 Easy Lessons" or Jack Nicklaus' "Golf My Way". Both great golfers, but Trackman & High Speed Video, have proven they didn't really know how or why what they were doing, worked so well.
Lots of good advice in your posts and you make some very good points. I'm going to use it.
I have a pretty good swing, but I just can't seem to get into the low 90's to save my ass. lol I hover right at 100 on championships.
Thanks for posting.
Surf Daddy
04-10-2025, 07:30 AM
I have been playing golf for 65 years. I have shot my age 3 times. I carried a low single digit handicap for 30+ years. I have had coaches ranging from high end Class A pros, to Ryder Cup players, to coaches for Tour Players. I have seen and learned a lot. My suggestion is simple. Buy a used set of quality clubs. Get fit by a professional. Take lessons from one pro. Don't confuse it all by looking at a multitude of YouTube videos. And for seniors, start a fitness program and focus on golf specific exercises and stretches. The TItleist Performance Institute has a wealth of information on this subject. And as Lee Travino once said - "I don't take lessons from someone who can't beat me."
Bay Kid
04-10-2025, 08:32 AM
"Little Red Book" by Harvey Penick. A must read for every golfer.
Also "The Invention of Golf" by Robin Williams a must for a great laugh.
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 09:42 AM
Lots of good advice in your posts and you make some very good points. I'm going to use it.
I have a pretty good swing, but I just can't seem to get into the low 90's to save my ass. lol I hover right at 100 on championships.
Thanks for posting.
If you can shoot a legit 100 on a Championship Course, it's likely course management that's holding you back. I've seldom seen anyone shoot 100, who couldn't shoot 90, if they managed their game and the course ... or played with the right Caddie and listened to him.
Snakster66
04-10-2025, 10:46 AM
For those of you who think Putting is so damn important, here's a practical test you can try, the next time you play golf.
Give yourself, EVERY putt that's within the length of your Putter (36"). In The Villages, most everyone does that, anyway.
For putts between 3' - 8', give yourself ONE of them. Putt the rest, keeping the above in mind.
Your score at the end of the day, will be what it would be, if a PGA Tour Player was doing your putting.
[Statistically, PGA Tour Pros make about 95% of their 3' putts and 50% of their 8' putts. Amateurs make about 40% of their 8' putts.)
I bet you your score won't improve as much as you think.
What's that prove? Your putting is likely no where near as bad as you think it is and improved putting is not the way to lower scores. At best, you're likely to improve a couple of strokes. Big deal. So you shoot 94 instead of 97?
I guess I oversimplfy things, but I have found that I usually score better in rounds where I have 30 putts than rounds where I have 36 putts. So, for me, that makes putting kinda important.
Not sure what to make of your last sentence. A three stroke improvement in someone's handicap is not a big deal? Maybe not for elite golfers (still hard to believe), but for the guy dipping into the teens for the first time it is. For the guy going from double digit to single digit it is. I've been making steady progress down the past few months, and the majority of it I attribute to improvement on and around the greens. And of course, playing smarter MOST of the time. So that you don't think I'm a complete contrarion, improved accuracy on approach is probably what I need to make that next step down. And I think GAPS (one element or another) is the main hinderence to that.
UpNorth
04-10-2025, 10:56 AM
My golf instructor told me that most people have LOFT
Lack Of F#&*ing Talent
Also, USGA:
U Suck, Go Again
Tyson
04-10-2025, 11:33 AM
Just shot 78 at a course i hate Belle Glade but I could really use a guy like you to take a look at GASP. Coming off hip replacement last year and need a new knee but with smarts and a short game I get it around pretty good. Live on Glenview so Id get the balls pay you what you want and meet you at the range whenever you got the time. Email is thepsychicveil@gmail.com im Bob
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 11:39 AM
I guess I oversimplfy things, but I have found that I usually score better in rounds where I have 30 putts than rounds where I have 36 putts. So, for me, that makes putting kinda important.
Not sure what to make of your last sentence. A three stroke improvement in someone's handicap is not a big deal? .
You're right. A 3 stroke improvement would be a significant improvement, but I think most putting "improvement" is transient. One day you're hot, the next day you're not. A consistent 3 stroke improvement in someone's putting game would be monumental and almost impossible to sustain. (Improving your # of putts/round by hitting it closer and chipping better, is surely a realistic goal.)
My point, was the putting is not what's holding most people back. It's a statistical fact. People tend to over-rate how well PGA Tour Pros putt and how poorly they themselves putt. The guys you're watching on TV, are the guys who are putting well that week ... not the guys who are putting average or worse.
The number of putts you take in a given round, isn't a very significant statistic. A friend of mine, once held the PGA Tour record (for about 9 months), for "fewest putts in a tournament". His name was Bob Menne and he was the first PGA Tour Pro, to use less than 100 putts in a 4 round tournament. [1977 TPC]
Bob couldn't putt for crap. I asked him one day, "Hey Bob, how they hell did you set that record, you can't put for $h_t". He said, "Did you see where I set the record? Those Greens at Sawgrass are so small, I think only hit 2 of them. I chipped it close every hole and made the putts".
The Arccos golf database has billions of shots. They claim one of the most significant statistics/goals for the average golfer, is GIR+1. You need to be on the Green, in no more than 1 shot over GIR
Arccos also posed an interesting question for this week's Masters. What would a 12 Handicap shoot at The Masters, if he got to start on the Green?
Every hole, you start on the Green. The ball is in the longest possible place from the hole (the average would be 86' from the hole). What do you shoot?
MX rider
04-10-2025, 12:48 PM
If you can shoot a legit 100 on a Championship Course, it's likely course management that's holding you back. I've seldom seen anyone shoot 100, who couldn't shoot 90, if they managed their game and the course ... or played with the right Caddie and listened to him.
You're probably right. I shot a legit 45 on the first nine a Belle Glade and legit but crappy 56 on the second nine. Very frustrating.
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 06:32 PM
Just shot 78 at a course i hate Belle Glade but I could really use a guy like you to take a look at GASP. Coming off hip replacement last year and need a new knee but with smarts and a short game I get it around pretty good. Live on Glenview so Id get the balls pay you what you want and meet you at the range whenever you got the time. Email is thepsychicveil@gmail.com im Bob
If you can get it around in 78, you don't need me. Sounds like your managing your golf game & the course, perfectly fine. My comments are were/are directed at the people shooting 90-110 ... & giving advice to their friends & better halves.
Glenview is one the courses I play regularly, at least once a week. If you want to play sometime, shoot me a PM on here. I typically play early in the 2nd wave.
& if you live in the gray house, across the street from the 1st Tee on Tally Ho, I'm jealous. It's my favorite house in TV.
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 06:44 PM
Admittedly anecdotal, but informative.
Nick Dunlap at The Masters today. He finished Round 1, DFL and shot 90.
Nick average 1.83 Putts per hole. 33 Putts.
Not that he hit many Greens in Regulation, but he averaged 1.68 Putts on those holes.
He had zero 3 putts, on arguably the hardest Greens to Putt in the world, given the stakes.
Great putting didn't do much to save his round.
PGApromike
04-10-2025, 06:54 PM
I've always used the word GASP. Grip, Aim, Stance or Setup & Posture.
I am a 30 year and still currently a PGA Professional. I was here in 2003 when we opened Nancy Lopez working in the golf academy. I still teach at my home here in the Newell village with great success just teaching impact position. Using video, and launch monitor students have immediately become better around the greens. Learning how to get and feel better impact will improve your entire swing. If a teacher starts you with full swings, my opinion is you will not get better as quickly as learning to hit "From the ball, out". Good luck everybody.
If you have a specific question, you can message me. I'll do my best to explain.
Mike
BrianL99
04-10-2025, 07:52 PM
I've always used the word GASP. Grip, Aim, Stance or Setup & Posture.
I am a 30 year and still currently a PGA Professional. I was here in 2003 when we opened Nancy Lopez working in the golf academy. I still teach at my home here in the Newell village with great success just teaching impact position. Using video, and launch monitor students have immediately become better around the greens. Learning how to get and feel better impact will improve your entire swing. If a teacher starts you with full swings, my opinion is you will not get better as quickly as learning to hit "From the ball, out". Good luck everybody.
If you have a specific question, you can message me. I'll do my best to explain.
Mike
Mike doesn't know it, but I played with him a couple of years ago, at TDS. Good guy and makes perfect sense. If you don't understand what the club face does, how it works, what impact is like ... all the "swing theories" are wasted.
It's way easier to teach a chip shot swing and transition it to a full swing, than starting with a Driver in your hand.
Old Traveller
04-11-2025, 03:18 PM
After further thought, I still believe you should incorporate flexibility in your acronym. I remember many years ago my buddy took a $2,000 lesson from Rick Smith. Rick told him he was doomed if he kept lifting weights that shortened his muscles and to quit working on his biceps and pecs. He went back for another $2,000 lesson and Rick Smith refused his money because he didn't listen to his advice:-))))
Grip isn't just how you lay your hands and fingers on the club. Wrist angle is important so a golfer set his wrists at the top of the swing. I guess that could also come under set up. I'm still a believer in technique. All kinds of different techniques. I shot 72 at Palmer from the whites yesterday. Hey, I'm old.
BrianL99
04-11-2025, 05:44 PM
After further thought, I still believe you should incorporate flexibility in your acronym. I remember many years ago my buddy took a $2,000 lesson from Rick Smith. Rick told him he was doomed if he kept lifting weights that shortened his muscles and to quit working on his biceps and pecs. He went back for another $2,000 lesson and Rick Smith refused his money because he didn't listen to his advice:-))))
Grip isn't just how you lay your hands and fingers on the club. Wrist angle is important so a golfer set his wrists at the top of the swing. I guess that could also come under set up. I'm still a believer in technique. All kinds of different techniques. I shot 72 at Palmer from the whites yesterday. Hey, I'm old.
72 from any tees is good golf. No matter the distance, you still have to get it in the hole 18 times. I shot 79 at TDS today, from the White. Golf's an up & down game.
If I was going to take a $2000 lesson, there are at least1000 people on my list, higher than Rick Smith. As you probably know, Rick Smith still holds the record for the lowest score in a PAT. I think he shot 122 or 123. He's parlayed that into quite a career. We had a Rick Smith Academy. Rick would visit every month, to chase the cart girls. Luckily, with his short legs, he never caught one.
He's been friends with Phil Mickelson for years and we comp'd him some Red Sox tickets, so he and Phil could see them play in Fenway Park. Remember when Phil tried to play MLB? He's a baseball junkie or at least used to be.
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