Fundamentals ‘Rule’ If You Want to Bomb It!

Fundamentals ‘Rule’ If You Want to Bomb It!

For many years one of the smashes that have been attributed to the single plane swing has been the myth about the loss of distance if you follow the basic single plane mechanics. I am not sure why, except that I think many people find it hard to accept that a swing not requiring the golfer to screw himself into the ground in the back-swing can produce a powerful hit to the ball that sends it equivalent distances.

I can personally attest to the dissonance other golfers have when seeing the single plane swing in action. In the last 20 years, by far the most often heard comment I’ve heard when playing with new partners has been the following. “How can you hit it so far when you swing so slow and only have half a swing?” Even when I seek to answer them seriously with my explanation of swing efficiency and effective bio-mechanics most wind up telling me they just don’t get it. In their minds, to hit it far you must wind up like a cork screw and then fire the coiled up muscles as if they were on the firing end of a platinum spark plug. Sorry guys…you really don’t get the whole story!

In an ironic juxtaposition to the myth, I’ve recently became the Performance and Swing Coach to one of Canada’s top athletes in the world of long drive golf. His name is Ryan Hawkins (aka The Hawk) and he is the current ILDC Canadian champion. He is also a member of Team Canada, a five-person team that went to Mazatlan, Mexico in November to compete in the International Long Drive Championships. Ryan is dedicated to the sport of long drive and works very hard at his swing coupled with an emphasis on fitness, strength, flexibility and focus. He describes himself as the equivalent of the home run specialist in baseball. He has one objective, hit the ball as far as he can into a prescribed space called the grid. The rules of long drive are simple: 6 balls, 2 minutes & 45 seconds and a grid of 45 yards wide (a regular fairway width). The ball must come to rest inside the grid. The longest drive wins.

In the right conditions, Ryan can hit the ball over 400 yards and his personal best in competition is a 416. Recently, while practicing off the tips from a 602-yard Par 5 at The Royal Ashburn Golf Club in Ontario, Canada (in cold and wet conditions) he had multiple hits over 400 yards. There is something very appealing about having only 180 yards left for your second shot on a Par 5 (a nine iron for Ryan by the way).

The long drive world is a universe that most of us are unfamiliar with. The ‘home run’ hitters like Ryan will generate swing speeds of over 150miles per hour and ball speeds in excess of 200 mph. In Ryan’s words. “I never leave anything in the bag, every swing is ALL out.” However, pure swing speed and strength is only the beginning. Ultimately, one must get the ball inside the grid for it to count, so emphasis must be placed on where the club face is at through the impact zone. At the speeds generated by these world class athletes, the slightest change in fundamentals can make a huge difference.

An example you might find interesting. Recently, during a training session and after a thorough analysis, we decided to make a small trail hand grip adjustment that transferred more connection to his trail hand index finger, thus providing better connection and flexibility to let the arm “hinge” (called the elbow) move more effectively in his backswing. To his amazement, we immediately picked up about 6 yards in distance with this simple change. In the world of long drive, this is like winning the Lotto Quick Pick!

For me as a Coach, it was a great reminder on the power of fundamentals. When working with a world class athlete like Ryan I always operate under the fundamental principle of “Do No Harm”. In other words, be very careful and sure about my recommendations before making them. If you are going to fine tune a Ferrari, you should be sure about which way to twist the screwdriver because a half-turn either way will have an impact.

At Graves Golf we really appreciate the value of having solid fundamentals. Years of teaching have continually reinforced that without the proper grip, alignment, posture and swing fundamentals you will find it difficult to continually produce a solid and consistent swing. The body either moves effectually or not. If the fundamentals aren’t in place it makes effective movement impossible.

For example, let’s talk about your posture at address and the key angles necessary to make effective movement possible. For my students we always talk about 45/20 as key checks to their posture. What I am referring to is that we need a spine angle (forward bend) of around 40-45 degrees and a spine tilt (side tilt) of around 20 degrees to the trail side. When coupled with a properly constructed grip this optimizes the likelihood that you can move the club along the correct path. You give yourself a chance!

Ryan Address Still

Check out the basic posture of Ryan Hawkins, current Canadian Long Drive Champ.

Note the ball set back, lead arm alignment with the shaft, the wide stance and sunny side up trail arm.  This posture was created by trial and error because Ryan found it worked. From here, it is fine tweaking.

In the final analysis, distance is a result of an equation that is made up of a biomechanically efficient swing technique coupled with fast swing speed and proper ball launch characteristics. If you seek reliable and consistent ball flights, you must insure that the path of the swing allows you to square the face through the impact zone. If your fundamentals aren’t sound, this will never happen.

In your next practice session, I encourage you to start by questioning all your fundamentals. Consciously examine your grip in fine detail. Make sure your hands are working together properly. Then, REALLY look at your posture and make sure your spine angle and spine tilt is in the proper 45-20 degree angle and then make sure your balance is properly distributed. When you are satisfied, only then should you begin to work on making the correct movements of the single plane swing.

Now, about our TEAM CANADA long drive folks. After two days of intense competition in Mexico, I am happy to report they WON the International Long Drive Championship by beating out a traditionally dominant TEAM USA by a total of 4 yards. For me, this was just further reinforcement that the fundamentals are the basis for all improvement.

About the Author: Ron Cruickshank, Ph.D., is a GGA Master Instructor and he teaches the single plane golf swing in Canada. Check out our site for his Winter Golf School schedule at The Golf Lab, Canada’s premiere indoor training facility featuring state of the art Trackman feedback at every lesson and school.

Looking Back

I was recently asked by one of our students how I became a good golfer at such a young age. His grandson had just started to play and he wanted to help start him on the right track. As I was explaining all the things I did as a junior golfer, I quickly realized the road I took to get my game to its current level could have been much easier. Looking back with the knowledge I have now, I would have practiced completely different.

I started playing golf at a very young age and had the advantage of growing up across the street from golf course. Every day after school I would spend my time on the course basically until dark. I quickly became one of the best juniors in my area but my Dad knew if I wanted become a true competitor, I needed instruction too.

Being from a small town in Missouri there wasn’t a PGA teacher within 50 miles so once a week my Dad would have to drive me to nearest city to take lessons. In the winter he would drive me over 150 miles to hit balls at an indoor driving range in Iowa. If it’s not obvious already, I spend A LOT of time practicing.

I thought practice was all about spending the most amount of time possible at the course. I believed the more I practiced the better I would get. No one in my hometown spent as much time at the golf course as I did. If I went a day without practicing or playing I felt like I would l lose my game. My perception of how to improve was completely distorted.

Truth is, the amount of time you practice isn’t important. Whether or not you’re Practicing correctly is the key.

Many gofers spend countless hours practicing and see very minimal if any improvement in their scoring. Sound familiar?

The problem is not the amount of effort or time people put into their practice, it’s whether or not they’re practicing correctly.

Now I have a few questions for you…

Think of your average practice session. Do you know if you’re practicing correctly?

How do you check your fundamentals and positions throughout the swing?

Do you know what the correct positions look like and how to fix your faults?

Don’t worry if you don’t have the answers, because GGA does.

The Graves Golf Academy has developed a way to ensure proper practice with our video coaching program. It’s as easy as filming a swing on your phone or tablet and hitting send. We’ll take care of all the rest. If I could go back and do it all over again, I would train using the GGA video coaching program. This program would have shortened my path to becoming an accomplished golfer. It’s convenient, practical, and successful. I firmly believe the fastest way to becoming a better golfer is by video analysis and good coaching. The video coaching program basically puts a GGA Master Instructor in your back pocket. You’ll be able to get a golf lesson from anywhere at any time. Whether you’re trying to break 90 or become a scratch golfer, this program will give you everything you need to take your game to the next level.

Trent White, PGA

End on a Positive Note, Tips for Improving (Part 9)

This is the 9th part of a series of practice tips titled “Tips for Improving”.

If you have missed any of the first 8 parts, you can go to our blog on our homepage at moenormangolf.com or direct at: http://moenormangolf.com/blog/

In those practice tips we discussed how we work with our students to create new habits rather than breaking old habits. It is essentially impossible to break bad habits (our mind/body is not set up that way) … but we are set up to be able to create new habits and ultimately make changes/create new movements, etc.  we want.

We talked about a book we strongly recommend – The Little Book of Talent/52 Tips for Improving Your Skills by Daniel Coyle

It is described as a manual for building a faster brain and a better you. It is an easy-to-use hand book of scientifically proven, field tested methods to improve your skills – your skills, your kids’ skills, your organization’s skills – in sports, music, art, math and business. The product of five years of reporting from the world’s greatest talent hotbeds and interviews with successful master coaches, it distills the daunting complexity of skill development into 52 clear, concise directives.

Whether you are 10 or 100, this is an essential guide for anyone who ever asked, “How do I get better?”

9780345530257

This book is available at Amazon.com

The last instructional newsletters (Tips for Improvement Part 1 through 7) we discussed 31 tips for improvement from staring a who you want to become, to being willing to be stupid, to finding the sweet spot, to practicing by yourself, to taking a nap…. Again, if you have not reviewed these past practice tips, would recommend.

This instructional newsletter (Part 9) we cover the next 5 tips for improving your skills and relate them to you learning/working on your single plane swing and golf game.

37.  To Choose the Best Practice Method, Use the R.E.P.S. Gauge

This tip provides a way to measure practice effectiveness. It’s call the R.E.P.S. Gauge. Each letter stands for a key element of deep practice.

R:  Reaching and Repeating

E:  Engagement

P:  Purposefullness

S:  Strong, Speedy Feedback

Reaching and Repeating: Does your practice have you operating on the edge of our ability, reaching and repeating? The key here is being you at the edge of your ability. When you are working on new moves, creating new habits, it should not be easy…  you should be pushing the edge of your ability.

Engagement: Does your practice command your attention? Does it propel you toward your goal? This is a perfect example of doing drills slow and making sure you hit all positions perfect and correct… It is not a matter of doing drills many times fast, but rather, fewer times slow. Doing a drill one time one time perfect is MUCH better than many times close to perfect…

Purposefulness: Does the task (drill) directly connect to the skill (new habit/new move) you want to build? Do you know which drills work for different areas of the swing? Do you know which drills you need to focus on? If not, it is critical to determine which drills you need to work on…

Strong, Speedy Feedback: Do you receive a stream of accurate information about your performance? Where you succeeded and where you made mistakes? You need to figure out a way to get the most direct and immediate feedback as possible. Direct and immediate feedback leads to VERY rapid learning and dramatically decreases the time to create new/lasting habits. The best and direct feedback we have is our online coaching program. You can see more at: http://moenormangolf.com/iga/

38.  Stop Before Your Exhausted

In many skills, particularly athletic, there’s a long tradition of working/practicing until total exhaustion. It may be good for improving fitness and mental toughness, but when it comes to learning, exhaustion is the enemy.

Fatigue slows the brain. It triggers errors, lessens concentration, and leads to shortcuts that create (or “bring back) bad habits. It’s no coincidence that it has been shown the premium practice occurs when people are fresh, usually in the morning, if possible. When exhaustion creeps in, it’s time to stop.

This is a perfect scenario when we talk about practicing for 15 minutes, taking a break, working another 15 minutes, etc. Don’t overdue it as you can easily “erase” what you’ve built.

39.  Practice Immediately After Performance

For most, after performance (playing), practice is probably the last thing you want to do, but if you are not work out (exhausted), it is absolutely the best time to practice. It is the time you will be able to target your weak points and fix them. Jack Nicklaus said: “I always achieve my most productive practice after an actual round. Then the mistakes are fresh in my mind and I can go to the practice tee and work specifically on those mistakes.”

40.  Just Before Sleep, Watch a Mental Movie

Many top performers have described this habit. Just before falling asleep, they play a movie of their idealized performance in their heads. A wide body of research supports this idea, linking visualization to improved performance, motivation, mental toughness and confidence. It will help your unconscious mind work toward your goals.

41.  End on a Positive Note

A practice session should end like a good meal – with a small, sweet reward. I strongly suggest ending your practice sessions on a good note. If you are working on a drill and feel like you hit the position(s) perfect – stop. Don’t do one more…. stop on the perfect one. If you are hitting balls and working on your swing – you have 5 or 10 balls left to hit and you hit one that feels just right and you feel like you make a “great” move at the ball… end the session. We used to call it “Leaving a few balls for the range rats…” It is much better to leave a few balls on the range ending on a good note, then hitting every last ball and ending on a negative one…

Please watch upcoming newsletter practice tips for continuation of the tips for improving your skills/creating new habits and improving your golf game.

The Sandwich Technique, Tips for Improving (Part 8)

This is the 8th part of a series of practice tips titled “Tips for Improving”.

In those practice tips we discussed how we work with our students to create new habits rather than breaking old habits. It is essentially impossible to break bad habits (our mind/body is not set up that way) … but we are set up to be able to create new habits and ultimately make changes/create new movements, etc. we want.

We talked about a book we strongly recommend – The Little Book of Talent/52 Tips for Improving Your Skills by Daniel Coyle

It is described as a manual for building a faster brain and a better you. It is an easy-to-use hand book of scientifically proven, field tested methods to improve your skills – your skills, your kids’ skills, your organization’s skills – in sports, music, art, math and business. The product of five years of reporting from the world’s greatest talent hotbeds and interviews with successful master coaches, it distills the daunting complexity of skill development into 52 clear, concise directives.

Whether you are 10 or 100, this is an essential guide for anyone who ever asked, “How do I get better?”

9780345530257

This book is available at Amazon.com

The last instructional newsletters (Tips for Improvement Part 1 through 7) we discussed 31 tips for improvement from staring a who you want to become, to being willing to be stupid, to finding the sweet spot, to practicing by yourself, to taking a nap…. Again, if you have not reviewed these past practice tips, would recommend.

This instructional newsletter (Part 8) we cover the next 5 tips for improving your skills and relate them to you learning/working on your single plane swing and golf game.

32.  Make Positive Reaches

There’s a moment during every practice or rep (action) when you face a choice: You can either focus your attention on what you want to do, or you can focus on the possible mistake (what you want to avoid). This tip is simple – ALWAYS focus on the positive move, the one you want to do, not the negative.

A perfect example is stroking a putt. Tell yourself what to do, rather than what not to do. Say the putt breaks about 1/2 a cup right to left. Say to yourself, “smooth stroke at the right lip”, rather than “don’t pull the putt”.

The point is, it always works to reach for what you want to accomplish, not away from what you want to avoid.

33.  To Learn From a  Book, Close The Book

What is the better way to learn from a book?

To read the book many times in a row, trying to memorize it?

or

To read the book once, close the book and write a summary of what you read?

There is no question, the best way to learn is writing the summary of what you learned. In fact, research shows people following the summary strategy learn 50% more material than those who try to memorize.

This is because one of deep practice’s most fundamental rules: Learning is Reaching. Closing the book and writing a summary forces you to figure out the key points (one set of reaches), process and organize those ideas so they make sense to you. The equation is always the same: More reaching equals more learning.

We strongly recommend the same whether you are learning from a video, from online coaching or attending one of our schools. In fact, during our schools we STRONGLY encourage and give time for all our students to take notes during and just after they learn new fundamentals so they can “write” those fundamentals in their own words. They can summarize what they just learned in their “own words”, they can process what they’ve just learned and can organize for themselves so they have a better understanding.

Again, whether you are learning from a video, webinar, online coaching or at a school, your best and most effective learning will be when you “close the book” and summarize for yourself, in your own words so you can review and process in the future.

34.  Understand The Sandwich Technique

What’s the best way to make sure you don’t repeat mistakes? (The million $ question right????)

One of the best ways is to employ the sandwich technique. It goes like this:

1.  Make the correct move.

2.  Make the incorrect move.

3.  Make the correct move again.

The goal is to reinforce the correct move and to put spotlight on the mistake, preventing it from slipping past undetected and becoming “wired” into your circuitry (brain).

During this technique, it doesn’t hurt to say to yourself – this is the good move or what I want to do. And when you are during the incorrect move, saying, this is the incorrect move or what I don’t want to do…

This technique is good to perform every so often, especially when you are confirming/checking to make sure you are doing a move correct. If you can perform the correct move and then the incorrect move, you can see/feel/know a difference, a great way to make sure doing move correct.

I employ this technique often when working with students and it always surprises me when the student will tell me they “don’t want to make the bad move again”. They act as if they are “afraid” to make the incorrect move again, because it might “stick” or something like that.

It will only “stick” or “creep back” if you aren’t aware of it. Doing it intentionally every so often will keep you aware of “what to look” for….

35.  Use The 3 x 5 Technique

It has been shown by those who research memory and learning – that our brains make stronger connections when they are stimulated three times with a rest period of ten minutes between each stimulation.

Translation: To learn something most effectively, practice it three times, with ten-minute breaks between each rep.

Perfect example would be the Single Plane Position Trainer drill (drill to learn backswing, top of swing to impact position). Practice the Single Plane Position Trainer drill for a few minutes (slowly) until you feel you have “hit” a position or two correct. Then take a ten-minute break. Do it again, practice the drill for a few minutes until you “hit” a position or two correct, then take another break.

I have also heard of this as the “commercial” technique for learning. When you are watching a T.V. show (or sporting event…), practice/drill during the commercials – then take a break while watching the shows. Work on the commercials, break during the show/action. Typically sets you up for drilling/practicing for a few minutes, then taking about a 10 minute break between.

36.  Invent Daily Tests

Daily routine (or when you practice) should include “little tests”. These tests should not be scientific, and should not be treated as verdicts, but rather as “fun games” to keep one involved, entertained and focused during the learning process.

Examples (ones I use often).

Chip 10 balls around the green and see how many you can get within 3 feet (the length of your putter (short putter)).

Putt 5 balls from 5 feet from 4 points around the hole (Twelve o’clock, 3 o’clock, 6 o’clock and 9 0’clock). Of the 20 balls, how many do you make?

Pick two points out on the range about 20 to 25 yards apart and about where your driver distance (ball flight) would land. How many balls out of 25 can you hit between those targets with the driver?

Hit 10 balls with an 8 iron to a target and see how many you can hit within 20 feet?

Again – these are just examples of “little tests” you can do for yourself to see if you are improving and a fun way to help you keep entertained and focused on your learning process.

Creating “tests” for yourself is a great way to enhance your learning process and to keep you focused.

Please watch upcoming newsletter practice tips for continuation of the tips for improving your skills/creating new habits and improving your golf game.

The Best Training I’ve Ever Seen

At a recent 3 Day Premier school in Palm Springs, I experienced a truly amazing transformation of a group of golfers. It was awe inspiring to watch, and as an instructor, very, very exciting to see. Permit me to elaborate.

It was on the 2nd morning of our 3-day school, and the group of students were warming up that morning by practicing our PVC drill. Our group of instructors, 5 of us in all, we walking the tee line, helping each golfer individually. After a few minutes of observation of not only the individuals, but the group in general, we noticed that the majority of the students were doing the drill incorrectly.

Now, if you’ve followed our instruction, you know our firm belief that if a drill isn’t done correctly, it’s doing more harm than good. In fact, practicing incorrectly can be fatal to your game.

We decided to stop the entire group, and circled everyone up. We reviewed each position of the PVC drill, reminded the group of valuable checkpoints at each position, had the group demonstrate correct positioning, and sent them back to the line to “try again”.

What transpired over the next 20 minutes was the best training session I have ever seen.  I saw a group of golfers who were intensely focused on each position. These golfers were moving to a position, checking it, and if the position was not correct, they fixed it immediately.  It was a truly magical moment to behold. That group improved their swings in that 20-minute session, which is what the schools are all about.

It’s training, and I mean truly training, that makes the golf school experience superior to any other form of instruction out there.

At each and every GGA school program, from the 5 day Build Your Game Camp to the 1-day Single Plane Experience, our focus as an instruction company is helping you learn to train. The fundamentals of the swing, putting, and the wedge game are simple, it’s learning how to train each of those areas – correctly – that make the golf school experience last.

If you are ready to experience exactly what your perfect golf swing feels like, then I encourage you to get to attend a GGA school sooner rather than later. If you are like most of our students, you’ve spent enough time guessing and being frustrated. It’s time to experience it, learn it, and train it under the supervision of a trained eye.

To find a school, CLICK HERE , and we look forward to helping you discover what true golf swing training really is.

Hit em’ straight!

Scott

 

Is Golf a Good Walk Spoiled?

The celebrated quote, “golf is a good walk spoiled”, is generally attributed to Mark Twain and was reignited by the sports writer John Feinstein in his well-known book A Good Walk Spoiled. However, when I did some research it appears the quote should rightly be attributed to the turn of the century writer Harry Leon Wilson, who first penned it in 1903 when writing about lawn tennis and put the quote in one of his books the year after. Regardless, the sentiment properly captures many golf devotees’ thoughts, although mostly after a bad round I suspect.

So, hear this: it turns out they all fibbed to us. Heaven forbid that Mark Twain, Harry Leon Wilson and John Feinstein led us astray. Recent research, as reported by Salon writer Henry Grabar, has demonstrated, through the use of a new sophisticated brain research technology that a respectable walk in the park is in fact GOOD for us. A bundle of fresh studies credit pastoral or park like settings with the positive attributes of reducing aggression, alleviating depression, improving mental function and promoting a meditative state.

We won’t burden this article with the technical details. Let it suffice to say that multiple studies have been conducted using a new portable EEG device using mobile electroencephalography to track real time brain wave function while subjects took a stroll through a variety of settings ranging from a dense urban city environment to a tranquil park. In every study it has been shown that a simple 25-minute walk in a city park “induced a significant increase in meditative thinking” while simultaneously reducing the negative states of arousal, frustration and engagement.

Understanding that one’s environment influences both our emotions and thinking is not a new thought. Architects have long sought to establish home, work and social environments that let our emotions soar and release our inner higher senses. Famous landscape architects like the American Frederick Law Olmstead (Central Park, the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina) or André Le Nôtre (Gardens of Versailles in France and Greenwich Park in London) have clearly sought to mimic nature and bring the symbolic balance and symmetry of nature to people experiencing their creations.

In this writer’s opinion, I find the same type of serenity present in golf courses. Naturally, some are on a higher plane than others. For example, I challenge you to walk Pebble Beach in California, Harbour Town Golf Links in South Carolina, TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Florida or the venerable Augusta National and not be affected by the sheer physical manifestations of each place. In my experience, each course emanates a particular energy that asks for coherence of the spirit. Just try it and tell me it’s not true.

Recently, I had the pleasure of playing a golf course near London, Ontario called Tarandowah. It is a pure inland links style course designed by Dr. Martin Hawtree of Royal Birkdale, Portmarnock and Killarney fame. This is a golf course designed by and for purists. It has nary a tree on it (and no cart paths originally) and if you hit an off-line shot you will find yourself in knee high fescue and facing a quandary of where to hit your next shot to avoid the massive pot bunkers prevalent in the fairways and around the greens. This golf course protects par with no apology.

My playing partners and I found this golf course spiritually renewing. Not pretty in a classic sense as it has no fancy club house or fixed flowerbeds, artificial waterfalls or shallow bunkers intended to balance the scene artistically. Rather, it is ominous and demanding and flowing with the rolling lands. You can visually look over the several hundred acres and from a distance it is hard to recognize as a golf course. It was pure golf and truly a renewing walk in the wild

However, regardless of the setting, it is still possible to turn a nice walk into a bucket of stress. By simply dissociating yourself from your surroundings and only focusing on what you might shoot as compared to your desires can lead you astray. When put that way, it doesn’t seem to make much sense does it?

Instead, try a round of golf in which you hit the shot, observe the outcome and then move on while enjoying the environment. I guarantee that at the completion of your round your emotions will be on the positive side.

I once asked Moe Norman what he was thinking about when he shot his 59’s.

He answered without hesitation. “Oh, it was birds and the bees, birds and the bees.”

Moe was simply stating that he was focused completely in the present. He would hit a shot and then pay attention to whatever was in his awareness at the moment. In his recollection, he was simply observing the outcomes of his shot and then moving on. It is virtually impossible to stay upset, annoyed or angry when just observing the passing moment and not getting attached to your outcomes. Give it a try.

For me, a big side benefit of knowing the positive impact of being in a park is that finally I can voice credibly to all that will listen; I am going to the golf course for health purposes. I’ve been telling my wife this for years however it still appears to me she doesn’t completely embrace this perspective. I see these new studies as clear evidence that I need to play more golf to gain the restorative benefits of the countrified setting. Haven’t shared that particular insight with her yet, but this new evidence has bolstered my resolve and confidence. Perhaps after taking out the garbage would be a good time.

About the Author: Ron Cruickshank, Ph.D., is a GGA Master Instructor and he teaches the single plane golf swing at our Canadian HQ, The Royal Ashburn Golf Club, in Whitby, Ontario. Go on-line and book a school or a lesson.

LEARN

THE

SWING

Join 1M+ Subscribers to get your FREE Video Quick Start Guide that reveals how to hit the ball farther and straighter more consistently from now on…

START YOUR NEW GOLF SWING