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Issue #: 172
Date: September 27, 2006
Publisher: Marc Solomon
  Golf Made Simple                Named #3 Golf School in America
This Issue is being read by over 9,100 Golfers!
In this Issue...
have Fun...get Consistent!
  ›› How To Hit Your Fairway Woods
I Developed A PLAN!
  ›› "A Very Low Round!"
On-Course Training
  ›› "39 For The First Time In My Life!"
Your Instructor for Life
  ›› From 95 To 85 Added To GMS
have Fun...get Consistent!
How To Hit Your Fairway Woods

How often do you have the dilemma of hitting your Irons well, but not hitting your Driver or Fairway Woods well?  A Golfer said to me the other day that he needs to work specifically on his Fairway Woods.  And I believe that if he did hit his fairway woods better, that his scores would improve dramatically.  So the next step has to be - how do we work on his Fairway Woods?

Do we go to the practice facility and practice hitting his 5-wood over and over until he hits it better?  Do we have him hit a few shots with his Fairway Wood, then go over a drill for him to practice for five or ten minutes, then go back to hitting with his 5 wood?

What's the best way to practice a specific club like your Fairway Wood or your Driver or your 3-iron?

The Monkey will say for you to go practice that club and find out how to hit it.  Though that maybe the reason why so many Golfers have 4, 5, 6 or more different swings.  The single digit Player that's happy and confident with their game - they have one swing.

The best Players in the world readily say that they swing their Driver just like they swing their Pitching Wedge or their 7-iron.  They try to make the same swing regardless of what club is in their hands.

Now many Monkeys will say that's impossible - "How can you make the same swing with your Pitching Wedge as you do with your Driver?  I only hit my Pitching Wedge 110 yards, if I swing my Driver the same way, then I'll only be hitting my Driver 110 yards!"

And fortunately for you, that's not true!

Why can you swing those two clubs the same and yet see different distances?  One reason is the different length of the clubs.  Your Driver most likely is somewhere around 45 inches long, whereas your Pitching Wedge might be only 35 inches long.  So one reason that your Driver will go longer is simply that it's 10 inches (25.4 centimeters for my metric friends) longer than your pitching wedge, which allows it to build up more power in your swing.  It's just like the difference between hammers.  If you had a sledge hammer that had a 12 inch handle and a sledge hammer that had a 22 inch handle - which sledge hammer would have more force when it hit an object?

What's reason number two?  Loft.  As Tina Turner sang - "What's Loft have to do with it?"  Well your Driver might have 10 degrees of Loft and your Pitching Wedge might have 48 degrees of loft.  What does this mean?  It means that when you hit with your Pitching Wedge, that more than 53% of the force that your club is imparting onto the golf ball is making it go up and only 47% of the energy is making it go forward.  When you hit a 10 degree Driver, only 11% of the force that your club is imparting onto the golf ball is making it go up and 89% of the energy is making it go forward.

So if you think about it, doesn't it make sense that if you hit your Pitching Wedge about 120 yards; that when you hit your Driver well, it probably goes 240 yards.  If you hit your Pitching Wedge 90 yards, you probably hit your Driver 180 yards.  If you hit your Pitching Wedge 140 yards, you probably hit your Driver 280 yards.  Think about your yardages for a second or two.

Taking into account that 47% of the energy of your Pitching Wedge and 89% of the energy of your Driver - almost double the amount - is being put into the ball going down the fairway, along with the extra 10 inches of shaft, allows your golf ball to go farther.

And some Monkeys will say - "Marc, this is obvious stuff.  And who cares about these percentages?"

Well maybe this isn't as obvious as you say it is, since if it's so obvious, why do you still continually swing your Driver different than your Pitching Wedge.  And the obvious answer is because you think you have to try to hit the ball with more power with your Driver - and you don't!  Trying to swing with too much power will throw off your "Pace of Swing" which will cause your timing to be different on every swing.  And that will lead to many different compensations in your golf swing.  And as you know - Compensation equals Inconsistency.

Just imagine how much better you could hit your Driver if you allowed yourself to swing exactly like you do with your pitching wedge or 7-iron - by just letting the longer club and less Loft do their magic.  Just imagine how much of a relief it would be if you could stand on the first tee knowing that when you swing your Driver with the smoothness of your Pitching Wedge that two important things are going to happen:  One - Your golf ball will go a very good distance (twice the distance of your pitching wedge) and stay in play (with similar accuracy of your pitching wedge since you'll be eliminating compensations) and Two - Everybody will be so impressed with your smooth "Ernie Els like swing" that produced such a beautiful golf shot.

So that brings me back to the Golfer who believes he just needs to practice exclusively with his Fairway Woods.

Golf Made Simple improves your ballstriking by using your Pitching Wedge and other high lofted clubs in addition to your Driver and Fairway Woods so that we can develop good habits that will more easily be translated into hitting your Fairway Woods - and I can say by the experience of seeing it happen thousand's of times, that you'll almost immediately see better results with your Fairway Woods, your Long Irons, your Hybrids and your Driver. 

And the sad part is that when we tell our Golfer that said he needed to work exclusively on his Fairway Woods that - we'll be able help him to hit his Fairway Woods better by also practicing with his Pitching Wedge - I believe that he'll say that's not what he's looking for.

And then I believe he'll fall into the Monkey Trap by going to an Instructor that says that they'll work exclusively with him on his Fairway Woods.  And I believe if he works exclusively on his Fairway Woods and finds a Fairway Woods Swing, that his Iron Swing and Driver Swing would then suffer.

How often do you have the dilemma of hitting your Irons well, but not hitting your Driver or Fairway Woods well?  Or hitting your Fairway Woods well, but you're not able to hit your Irons or Driver well?  This is because you worked so hard on finding a swing for a specific club and that swing most likely doesn't translate into your other clubs.

The skill of an outstanding Golf Professional is to work with you to find your swing that allows you to swing the same with all your clubs, so that you don't have to have a Driver Swing, a Fairway Wood Swing, a Long Iron Swing, a Mid-Iron Swing, a Short Iron Swing, a Hybrid Swing, etc., etc., etc.

The Monkey is trying to find a different swing for each club in their bag

The Player succeeds by just using one swing for all their clubs

Go ahead, be a Player!

Regards,

Marc Solomon - Your Instructor For Life


Golf Made Simple!

Limited to 4-golfers per class   -  9-holes On-course Training each day   -  Golf Instructor for Life

www.GolfMadeSimple.com        Alex@GolfMadeSimple.com        904-460-8355

Join the 100's of Golfers that have discovered how to break 90 - contact Alex today!

I Developed A PLAN!
"A Very Low Round!"

Hayden

Let me start out by saying the golf expierence with Golf Made Simple was one I will remember for the rest of my life - "Tick Tock" really works.  I played last night in my weekly member blitz, a nine hole game with twelve guys.... let's just say the difference was noticeable on the first drive when I hit a drive over the bunkers about 260 and hit a wedge to 6 feet for birdie and yes, my divot was in front of the ball.  I went onto chip in for another birdie two holes later.  Wow a 38!  A solid plan and a couple of seven irons led to a very low round.

Regards

Mark V. - Charleston, South Carolina - Sent September 22nd, 2006

Attended Golf Made Simple in St. Augustine on September 15th to 17th, 2006


Golf Made Simple!

Limited to 4-golfers per class   -  9-holes On-course Training each day   -  Golf Instructor for Life

www.GolfMadeSimple.com        Alex@GolfMadeSimple.com        904-460-8355

Join the 100's of Golfers that have discovered how to break 90 - contact Alex today!


On-Course Training
"39 For The First Time In My Life!"

Dear Hayden and Marc,

Just a quick note to say I have continued to play well and break some interesting thresholds. I had just recently shot a career best 41 several times on the back nine of my home club, but until recently my results on the much more devious front nine had been far less pleasant. I had shot one 43, a couple 44s, and, in general, I was always 3-4 shots worse on the front than the back.

Anyway, last Thursday I went out at 8 am with no practice. Put my first tee shot into the woods, had to drop and play 3, and went on to play the most outstanding golf of my life until that point. I ended up saving bogey on 1, bogeying two, (toughest hole on course), before holing a 30 foot wedge for birdie on three.  After parring 5, I rolled in a twenty two foot putt for birdie on 6. The first time in my life I had had 2 birdies in a single round and both on the front!

Finished the front nine that day in 41. A new record.

This morning I went out again at the crack of dawn and this time, from the first shot of the day, I was cracking 'em right down the middle.  Parred #1, Bogeyed #2 and #3, then Double Bogeyed #4, the second hardest hole on the course. Then I parred 5, 6, 7, and 8. On #9 I struck a wonderful 6 iron to 14 feet from the pin and walked off the birdie putt and took a good long look. Of course, I tried to put the thought out of my mind, but it was impossible to ignore the fact that if I made this putt I would have a 39 ON THE FRONT NINE, breaking 40 for the first time in my life.

So I savored the moment. Picked a tiny fleck of grass as my target, lined up, and drilled the 14 footer right into the center of the cup for birdie and a 39.

So that is four thresholds I have reached in the past 7 days: 1) Having two birdies in one round for the first time 2) Establishing a new personal best on the treacherous front nine at Granadilla CC., 3) Breaking that personal best 7 days later, and 4) breaking 40 for the first time!

Happy, happy, happy playing golf.

All my best.

Todd Temkin - Valparaíso, Chile - Sent September 21st, 2006

Attended Golf Made Simple in St. Augustine on August 19 to 21st, 2005


Golf Made Simple!

Limited to 4-golfers per class   -  9-holes On-course Training each day   -  Golf Instructor for Life

www.GolfMadeSimple.com        Alex@GolfMadeSimple.com        904-460-8355

Join the 100's of Golfers that have discovered how to break 90 - contact Alex today!

Your Instructor for Life
From 95 To 85 Added To GMS

In the attempt to continually add more resourses to the GolfMadeSimple.com website - we've added another feature that you might find helpful to your golf game.  As you know from last week's Golf Improvement Weekly, we added our "How To Stop Your Slice Video" - which because of the overwhelming demand of Golfers going over to our website to watch the video, crashed the website for a little while.

But don't worry, we fixed the problem and our web team has assured us that we can now handle the traffic the next time that happens.  I mean it's not that we don't get people coming to our website everyday.  We average over 1,100 unique visitors everyday that view over 4,000 pages - which translates into over 401,000 unique visitors and over 1,460,000 web pages viewed on the GMS website each year.  The problem is that we had what our web team descibed as a "mad bull rush" to watch the video!

So this week we're more prepared if there's a rush to see "How To Improve Your Score 10 Strokes".  Many Golfers may remember the Golf Improvement Weekly from May 16th, 2006; where Marc featured this piece about how a 95 Golfer can improve to become an 85 Golfer.  Well Marc has updated it with even more thoughts, along with having a link that shows how a 105 Golfer can improve to become a 95 Golfer.

Just click here to be taken directly to getting some cutting edge ideas on how to reach your goals.  Many Golf Professionals don't think out of the box when trying to help the Golfers they work with to improve.  On the other hand, the only box Marc knows about is the Golf Made Simple Box that we use to track your Results when you're here to see us.

Also, we have posted our 2007 Rates and Dates - just click here to go to our Rates and Dates Page - or you can just call me.  You can choose which ever way is easier for you, though I do enjoy speaking on the telephone, so please don't be shy - I'd love for you to call.

Now for the next available Golf Made Simple Dates -

Click on a specific date listed below to send an email saying "I'm interested in these dates."

Or call Alex at 904-460-8355 and you can discuss the dates with a real person.

Regards,

Alex - Director - Golf Made Simple Inc.

 


St. Augustine

September 2006 Dates

 

September 29th to October 1st - St. Augustine

 

October 2006 Dates

October 2nd to 4th - St. Augustine

October 6th to 8th - St. Augustine (Level 2 Program)

October 9th to 11th - St. Augustine

October 13th to 15th - St. Augustine

October 16th to 18th - St. Augustine

October 20th to 22nd - St. Augustine

October 23rd to 25th - St. Augustine

October 27th to 29th - St. Augustine

October 30th to November 1st - St. Augustine

November 2006 Dates

November 3rd to 5th - St. Augustine

November 6th to 8th - St. Augustine

November 10th to 12th - St. Augustine

November 13th to 15th - St. Augustine

November 17th to 19th - St. Augustine

November 20th to 22nd - St. Augustine (Level 2 Program)


Amelia Island

September 2006 Dates

 

September 29th to October 1st - Amelia Island

 

October 2006 Dates

October 2nd to 4th - Amelia Island

October 6th to 8th - Amelia Island

October 9th to 11th - Amelia Island

October 13th to 15th - Amelia Island

October 16th to 18th - Amelia Island

October 20th to 22nd - Amelia Island

October 23rd to 25th - Amelia Island

October 27th to 29th - Amelia Island

October 30th to November 1st - Amelia Island

November 2006 Dates

November 3rd to 5th - Amelia Island

November 10th to 12th - Amelia Island

November 13th to 15th - Amelia Island

November 17th to 19th - Amelia Island

November 20th to 22nd - Amelia Island


San Diego

November 2006 Dates

October 30th to November 1st - San Diego

November 3rd to 5th - San Diego

November 6th to 10th - San Diego (5-day class)

November 13th to 15th - San Diego

November 17th to 19th - San Diego

November 20th to 22nd - San Diego

November 24th to 26th - San Diego

November 27th to 29th - San Diego

December 2006 Dates

December 1st to 3rd - San Diego

December 4th to 6th - San Diego

December 8th to 10th- San Diego

December 11th to 13th - San Diego

December 15th to 17th - San Diego

December 18th to 20th - San Diego

For Future Dates in November, December and 2007 please click on the location you're interested in below to email me about dates and information -

Amelia Island, Florida

St. Augustine, Florida -- San Diego, California


Golf Made Simple!

Limited to 4-golfers per class   -  9-holes On-course Training each day   -  Golf Instructor for Life

www.GolfMadeSimple.com        Alex@GolfMadeSimple.com        904-460-8355

Join the 100's of Golfers that have discovered how to break 90 - contact Alex today!