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Tom Stickney (and Phil Blackmar): Don’t forget how to “play” golf!

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One of the greatest things about golf today is that with the internet you have an opportunity to research, read, and get to know what different players and teachers believe unlike years ago. When I started teaching back in the early 90s golf instruction was a closed shop and everyone was very proprietary with what they knew and understood. Now everything is out in the open because of the internet and it’s a much better system for upcoming teachers and players.

One of my favorite things to do is to go back and read what the Tour Players did long before the days of “gurus” because I love to hear HOW they did it and played the game to such a high level with such little information- unlike today. As I scoured the internet I found the blog of Phil Blackmar, whom you know from The Golf Channel and as a long-time Tour Member. Phil was a grinder with a “self-made” golf swing who won a few events on Tour to the outsiders, but to his peers he was a thinker and a cerebral player who always got the most out of his game.
For me, the more I read what Phil wrote in his various blogs the more I understood that he was indeed a genius in the ways of understanding HOW to play, think, and make it happen on the course in order to shoot the lowest score possible…and that is the reason why he was on Tour for over 20 years!

So, I welcome you to read the next few articles in my series with Phil and I hope you enjoy his information as much as I do…

Thoughts from Phil Blackmar

The game has always been about how to score and it continues to be that way today. However, over the past 30 years we have seen the prescription for how to score change considerably. getting it around the course as best as possible. The swing has always been important and …when the swing was “there” it was easier to control your ball’s flight. However, players seemed more prepared to use manufactured shots when the swing was off to move the ball from point A to point B, find a way to swing with certainty and to “manage” misses.

During this time, you saw swings of all types but these unique moves were the player’s way of avoiding a certain miss. Remember Ben Hogan said “golf is not a game of good shots, it’s a game of bad shots.” It was less about being perfect and more about understanding your game to the point where you could control the ball regardless of what swing showed up on that day. Couples said he would get to the course and see which way the ball was moving and that was the shot he played that day no stress, no worries, it’s all about ebbs and flows. Jack Nicklaus echoed this point when he said “his swing felt really good about half the time but was manageable 95% of the time.”

The advent of video began our first foray into trying to be perfect or look a certain way. The “swing model”, a collection of positions based on averages of very good players, came into vogue. The premise was if it didn’t look like the “perfect” Tour Pro model, then it would likely fail under pressure- right?

Next came the advent of Trackman and other launch monitors coupled with video. Now we could look deeper into impact and leave no stone unturned. These machines have provided us with a wealth of information such as how to better understand ball-flight outputs so we can make our practice sessions more efficient. If we could only better manage impact then we could not help but play better- right?

Now the game has shifted toward playing “golf swing” where technique and science is the solution to all problems golf-related. A great example of this has to do with curve. Curve was a tool used for both the physical and mental sides of the game where the shot created the swing. Now, often players are consumed with path, face, spin axis, etc., all is a quest to hit the ball straight and avoid curve. The swing creates the shot.

Today’s prescription is to hit balls using your launch monitor trying to repeat the “perfect” swing over and over. Then you try and take this to the golf course and see what happens. If you make good swings then you have a chance to win, but if you make bad swings then you fail- and it’s back to the practice tee to go to work on what broke down in your robotic quest to hit shots- NOT play golf. What happened to the guys like Trevino, who said if swing A was not working then I’ll use swing B, and if too isn’t working, then I’ll use swing C…I know one of them will show up to play golf that day! He was less concerned with hitting perfect shots or making perfect swings and more focused on controlling the ball or avoiding trouble as best as he could on that given day!

Golf instruction used to be dominated by players whose primary concern was teaching students how to score using feels, shapes and imagination. Science entered the picture and changed the game’s landscape. Not only that, it dominates golf instruction today. Science vs feel and creativity is a contentious topic where people tend to want one or the other but not a combination of the two. However, unquestionably a player’s best game rests on a pendulum that balances science with the human side. There is no one answer or method that helps everyone because no two swings are exactly alike. No one person can feel for another just like timing and feels often change like the wind. The best answer is the one that fits the player like a glove and takes from both science and the intangible game of feels. It’s time we move forward by taking the best from yesterday and marrying the best from today.

After all, who do you want for your partner on the first tee: the player who looks good or the player who feels good?

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Tom F. Stickney II, is a specialist in Biomechanics for Golf, Physiology, and 3d Motion Analysis. He has a degree in Exercise and Fitness and has been a Director of Instruction for almost 30 years at resorts and clubs such as- The Four Seasons Punta Mita, BIGHORN Golf Club, The Club at Cordillera, The Promontory Club, and the Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort. His past and present instructional awards include the following: Golf Magazine Top 100 Teacher, Golf Digest Top 50 International Instructor, Golf Tips Top 25 Instructor, Best in State (Florida, Colorado, and California,) Top 20 Teachers Under 40, Best Young Teachers and many more. Tom is a Trackman University Master/Partner, a distinction held by less than 25 people in the world. Tom is TPI Certified- Level 1, Golf Level 2, Level 2- Power, and Level 2- Fitness and believes that you cannot reach your maximum potential as a player with out some focus on your physiology. You can reach him at [email protected] and he welcomes any questions you may have.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. lee j kocanda

    Jan 24, 2022 at 8:59 pm

    great piece so true as i have experienced myself alwayshave been a solid player but wanted to get that perfect swing bad move i am 69 and remember years ago watching the tour boys and every swing was different now they all look the same give me miller barber jim thrope calvin peete trevino they all got the job done without a posse

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Instruction

The Wedge Guy: 5 indisputable rules of bunker play

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Let’s try to cover the basics of sand play – the “geometry and physics” at work in the bunkers – and see if we can make all of this more clear.

First of all, I think bunkers are among the toughest of places to find your ball. We see the tour players hit these spectacular bunker shots every week, but realize that they are playing courses where the bunkers are maintained to PGA standards, so they are pretty much the same every hole and every week. This helps the players to produce the “product” the tour is trying to deliver – excitement. Of course, those guys also practice bunker play every day.
All of us, on the other hand, play courses where the bunkers are different from one another. This one is a little firmer, that one a little softer. So, let me see if I can shed a little light on the “whys and wherefores” of bunker play. I’ve always challenged the old adage, “bunker shots are easy; you don’t even have to hit the ball.” I challenge that because bunker shots are the ONLY ones where you don’t actually try to hit the ball, so that makes them lie outside your norm.

Let’s start with a look at the sand wedge; they all have a sole with a downward/backward angle built into it – we call that bounce. It’s sole (no pun intended) function is to provide a measure of “rejection” force or lift when the club makes contact with the sand. The more bounce that is built into the sole of the wedge, the more this rejection force will affect the shot. And when we open the face of the wedge, we increase the effective bounce so that this force is increased as well.

The most basic thing you have to assess when you step into a bunker is the firmness of the sand. It stands to reason that the firmer the texture, the more it will reject the digging effect of the wedge. That “rejection quotient” also determines the most desirable swing path for the shot at hand. Firmer sand will reject the club more, so you can hit the shot with a slightly more descending clubhead path. Conversely, softer or fluffier sand will provide less rejection force, so you need to hit the shot with a shallower clubhead path so that you don’t dig a trench.

So, with these basic principles at work, it makes sense to remember these “Five Indisputable Rules of Bunker Play”:

  • Firmer sand will provide more rejection force – open the club less and play the ball back a little to steepen the bottom of the clubhead path.
  • Softer sand will provide less rejection force – open the club more and play the ball slighter further forward in your stance to create a flatter clubhead path through the impact zone.
  • The ball will come out on a path roughly halfway between the alignment of your body and the direction the face is pointing – the more you open the face, the further left your body should be aligned.
  • On downslope or upslope lies, try to set your body at right angles to the lie, so that your swing path can be as close to parallel with the ground as possible, so this geometry can still work.  Remember that downhill slopes reduce the loft of the club and uphill slopes increase the loft.
  • Most recreational golfers are going to hit better shots from the rough than the bunkers, so play away from them when possible (unless bunker play is your strength).

So, there you go – the five undisputable rules of bunker play.

As always, I invite all of you to send in your questions to be considered for a future article. It can be about anything related to golf equipment or playing the game – just send it in. I need your input to keep writing about things you want to know.

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Instruction

The Wedge Guy: Making the short ones

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One of the most frustrating things in golf has to be missing short putts. I’m talking about putts under six feet for the most part here, but particularly those inside of four. You hit a great approach to set up a short birdie…and then miss it. Or you make a great pitch or chip to save par — or even bogey — and it doesn’t go in.

When we face any short putt, several things happen to get in the way of our success. First, because we feel like we “have” to make this, we naturally tense up, which mostly manifests in a firmer hold on the putter, maybe even the proverbial “death grip” (appropriately named). That firmer hold is generally concentrated in the thumbs and forefingers, which then tightens up the forearms, shoulders and everything else. So the first tip is:

  • Lighten up. When you take your grip on the putter, focus on how tight you are holding it, and relax. Feel like you are holding the putter in the fingers, with your thumbs only resting lightly as possible on the top of the putter. To see the difference, try this: while you are sitting there, clench your thumb and forefinger together and move your hand around by flexing your wrist – feel the tension in your forearm? Now, relax your thumb and forefinger completely and squeeze only your last three fingers in your hand and move it around again. See how much more you are able to move? Actually, that little tip applies to all your shots, but particularly the short putts. A light grip, with the only pressure in the last three fingers, sets up a smooth stroke and good touch.

The second thing that happens when we have a short putt is we often allow negative thoughts to creep in… “Don’t miss this”…“What if I miss it?”…“I have to make this”…all those put undue pressure on us and make it that much harder to make a good stroke.

So, the second tip is:

  • Chill out. Just allow yourself a break here. You have hit a great shot to get it this close, so allow yourself to believe that you are going to make this. Relax, shake out the nerves, and think only positive thoughts while you are waiting your turn to putt. And you know what? If you do miss it, it’s not the end of the world. It’s just one shot. So chill out and have fun…and make more short putts.

Finally, we often tend to get so focused on “just make a good stroke” that we get all wrapped up in mechanical thoughts. Forget those. Focus your vision intently and completely on the target. Most short putts are pretty darn straight, or maybe just on or outside the high side. My favorite thought on these putts comes from a favorite movie, The Patriot.

  • Aim small, miss small. Early in the movie, Gibson’s character took his two very young sons and several rifles and went to rescue his older son. He coached them to “Remember what I told you?” and the son replied “Yes sir. Aim small, miss small.” That’s great advice on short putts. Instead of focusing your eyes on the hole, pick a specific spec of dirt or grass in the back edge, or inside one lip or the other – on whatever line you want the putt to start. Don’t just look at the hole…focus intently on that very specific spot. That intensifies your visual acuity and allows your natural eye-hand coordination to work at its very best.

So, there you have the three keys to making more short putts:

  1. Lighten up
  2. Chill out
  3. Aim small, miss small

I hope this helps all of you make more of them.

More from the Wedge Guy

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Clement: The key to making your practice swing your actual swing

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If I had a dollar for every time I hear a golfer say, “My practice swing looks and feels great but when I go to the ball…”

Here is a major reason why that is and you will not hear this from any other teaching academy except ours (for years) for the moment. And it works for every single golfer!

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