Julian Mellor PGA Professional, positive impact golf Coach , we help our clients to play stress free, effortless golf , keeping things simple and easy to understand
Friday, 29 January 2016
How do I choose a golf Coach or a Golf Teacher?
Tuesday, 26 January 2016
How do I stop a shank guest blog by Brian Sparks Positive impact Coach
Many years ago I heard of a study that had been carried out by the golf club manufacturers into the average golfer’s ball striking characteristics. It found that the strike was generally off the toe end of the club. I immediately disagreed as my experience with golfers had mainly been that they hit the ball, especially with irons, towards the heel. In fact, so much so that they often hit a ball that they deemed to be topped or sliced when it had actually come from the heel or hosel of the club.
A surprising number of players have no knowledge or feeling for which part of the club has been in contact with the ball on any given shot, especially a shank. In France, a shank is called a ‘socket’” French players often hit a shank and, in a rather Latin manner, raise their arms in disbelief and horror whilst shouting out loud “SOCKET!”
Other than the fact that the ball shoots off to the right, there is also a particular feel and sound to these shots that most golfers are in complete ignorance of.
There is no doubt that a tendency to strike the ball even slightly towards the low part of the heel is one of the things that erodes a golfer’s confidence in minutes. Here you will see the club in the sort of position that any coach who uses video will have seen many, many times:
From this position it is entirely possible to strike the ball from the middle of the club but another false belief or false instruction, often plays a part in turning this shot into a disaster. That is the idea that the club must go from inside to outside through the impact area.
I was coaching a player in France who had been to the States a few months previously and had taken a 10-day course with a female teacher. As a result of her teaching his short game was in a dreadful state. He literally couldn’t trike a ball properly with any short shot. He showed me a video of his short game lesson and two things struck me. Firstly, this woman never stopped talking.
Secondly, he started off hitting some nice chips from about 15 yards admittedly with a slightly out to in swing path. She identified this and asked him to go more in to out.
Suddenly he went from hitting some good shots to being incapable of anything other than a shank. Having reviewed this video together, he left our session understanding that she had caused his shanking and that it hadn’t been his fault!
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The truth about shanking is simple as it happens when the club is tracking too far away from the body and gets outside the line. Placing a second ball as per the photo below and attempting to hit the white ball without touching the yellow one soon gets rid of the problem. It is also a great way of improving someone’s ball striking as our confidence disappears at an alarming rate as soon as we strike the ball towards the heel.
Centrifugal force will always throw the shaft away from the body in the downswing. It just can’t do the opposite because the body is in the way. This next photo shows the real effect of the shaft getting away from the body.
Notice how the shaft moves not only away from the player but also in an upward direction. Heeled, shanked shots tend to be hit low on the clubface for this reason. A pure shank, i.e. one completely off the hosel and not even touching the face of the club, doesn’t go up in the air due to there being no loft applied to the ball. Many topped shots by beginners and new golfers are caused by this not, as will not surprise you, the old saying ‘you lifted your head.’
I agree that you can hit a shank coming from the inside. It suffices only to keep the clubface very open as per the photo below. The more a player has an open face, the more he is likely to shank.
I want to give you my thoughts on the way iron club design has changed over the years and to give you some insight into an effect of these modifications that even the manufacturers themselves seem not to have noticed. Take a look at this photo of my 9-iron after a practice session in which I struck the ball particularly well.
In the next photo you will see how iron design has changed over the years. The hosel of the modern club has shortened considerably, the weighting has become peripheral and the toe is much heavier. This has not only moved the sweet spot away from the heel towards the middle and made it bigger but it has also helped to create the capability to hit well-struck shots towards the toe. Being a flat surface, even shots well off the toe can give acceptable results whereas shots towards the heel cannot.
I believe that 2 aspects combine to produce the shank; 1/ the centrifugal force mentioned earlier and 2/ the fear of missing the ball altogether (i.e. missing it on the inside). I don’t believe that many golfers, especially beginners, are worried about missing it on the outside.
Anyone who has taught the game of golf will know that analysing the swing of someone who is cursed with the shanks is the most difficult of all situations we face. Generally, when we shank we start to move less. Fear takes hold and we don’t turn or transfer our weight going back. Encouraging people to move more at this time can be tricky. However, the 2BX really does work without having to go down the dark tunnel of swing analysis. I recommend it to you most highly.
How do I play relaxed golf guest blog by Brian Sparks
In France a few years ago, a doctor had a coaching session with me and, two days later, I met him outside the clubhouse after he had just played 9 holes. After saying hello, he immediately asked me a question. “Brian, are you a professeur of golf or a professeur of relaxation?”
This guy was very tense, stiff and static so the lesson had focused on helping him to understand the limitations he was putting on his swing by applying the 3DDs as was so often the case in France. It was interesting and instructive for me to hear his summary of the benefits of the lesson. The most important thing he had taken from the session was to be more relaxed.
How many golfers play a relaxed game of golf? Isn’t that what most people play the game for, to have some fun in their leisure time playing a game they love?
Well, from what I’ve seen over the many years I’ve watched and studied golfers around the world it’s exactly the opposite. Instead of using golf as a relaxing antidote to the tensions and pressures of life, people often develop their golf to become yet another source of stress.
As a PIG coach you will understand this scenario only too well: the feet rooted to the ground, the head fixed, the arms held rigidly straight and the hands gripping the club excessively hard in order to gain maximum control of the club. By helping golfers to understand and feel the negative consequences of this way of swinging a club you will already help them to make great progress towards a relaxed game. Even more, encouraging them to go to extremes of movement and relaxation can provide them with surprising insights in that letting go of imagined control can actually lead to more control and sometimes more distance.
Here are a few more ideas to help you in this process.
1. Nearly all meditation sessions such as Yoga commence with a couple of deep breaths. Breathing is the first piece of the jigsaw of a relaxed body. Oxygen flows through the blood stream to our hearts and brains and we immediately feel more relaxed.
The wrong type of concentration or, indeed, too much concentration can easily turn into tension. As Tim Gallwey wrote in his first book, The Inner Game of Tennis, trying hard is a questionable virtue for exactly that reason; it tends to limit our breathing and intake of oxygen.
Our muscles also benefit from the oxygen that helps them to relax. To be effective, a golf swing or any throwing action requires your muscles to be relaxed, long and elastic. When they are tight and short the brain recognizes the limitation put on them and reacts by increasing effort.
This is the major explanation for our students telling us that they hit the ball as far if not further when they reduce effort levels. Additionally, they feel less tired after a round of golf and seniors, in particular, find their golfing lives extended (for which they will love their PIG coach!).
So, taking a couple of deep breaths before each shot is a simple way of helping any golfer perform better, be that on a drive or a putt. The brain is also a muscle and will benefit from being more physically relaxed. Science is beginning to show that a tense brain produces the emotion that we are doing something difficult whereas a relaxed brain sends the message that we are doing something easy, irrespective of the task in hand.
If you look at a torso from shoulders to hips there are 3 levels of breathing;
1. Low in the abdomen
2. Middle in the diaphragm
3. High in the upper chest
3. Relates to thinking so when your breathing is shallow and you are thinking a lot this is where it will be coming from. It will not produce high levels of oxygen intake.
2. Will be better than 3 but still nowhere near the maximum possible levels available to you.
1. Filling this are of your body first will allow you to go on in one breath to fill 2 then 3 for total intake efficiency.
Optimum breathing proceeds in 3 parts:
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a) Start each breath by imaging a vertical pump in your stomach that can expand upwards and downwards. The first action is to expand this pump in a downward direction, as this will open the bottom of your breathing apparatus.
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b) Allow your diaphragm to expand as if the upward motion of the pump is now engaged.
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c) Let the air into your chest until it starts to open up your shoulders
I once suffered badly from stress when I took over the management of a club in France. I was under great pressure to rewrite all the club literature, revamp the entire running of the club, arrange marketing and promotion of membership, interview new staff and still do my coaching. I worked so hard and so fast that I literally had no time to breathe. I had such a bad headache that I thought I was developing a brain tumour. As soon as I started my breathing exercises it disappeared.
As many great golfers do, notably Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson, shaking your arms, shoulders and hands as part of your re-shot routine helps to rid yourself of tension.
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Whilst addressing the ball, keep moving, stay in motion. It is far more difficult to start the backswing from a completely static, stationary and frozen address position. Personally, I like to feel that my motor is already turning and that all I have to do is let the clutch slip and away I go. (Slipping the clutch is the English way of describing how to pull away in a car that has a manual gearbox).
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Hold a club at the butt end with your thumb and index finger, about a foot (30cms) off the ground. Set it in motion with your other hand so that it swings like a pendulum. It will move in a very rhythmic way, slowing down at each extremity of its arc before accelerating naturally as it swings back down. Once it has moved through a couple of arcs, start moving your feet in time with the movement of the club keeping a close synchronisation between you and the club.
Now accelerate the movement until the speed gets so great that the synchronicity completely disappears. This is what happens when you swing too quickly especially in the transition at the end of the backswing and start of the downswing.
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Try hitting some shots with the softest possible grip and with the softest, arms you can manage (even let your arms bend excessively) just to see and feel what happens. In the first instance, try this with some short shots before going to a longer club.
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To help golfers to feel the consequences of tension try this out with them:
Ask them to hold a 7-iron or similar club out in front of them at chest height and to grip it as tightly as they possibly can. At the same time, ask them to hold their arms as straight and as rigidly as possible. Now tap a golf ball on the face of their club.Now do the same again asking them to grip the club as softly as they can without dropping the club. Add that you want their arms and shoulders to be as relaxed as possible also. Now tap the ball on the face again.
Some people get it straight away as they feel the ball more softly and hear the sound change. Others take a bit longer but the effect on them is that they now have a specific reason to let go of debilitating tension and some understanding of how tension affects ball striking and feel.
This exercise is called ‘FEELX.’
PIG coaches regularly help golfers to strike the ball more sweetly by helping them to reduce tension. This is another area where they will gain great satisfaction and confidence in their own ability.
As identified in the Postive Impact Golf book, Tension is the golfer’s number 1 enemy!
Thursday, 14 January 2016
13 proven steps to Golfing Success
Wednesday, 13 January 2016
Are golfers afraid ?
Monday, 4 January 2016
Why going on a Programme really works
How do I stop topping the ball ( guest Blog by Brian Sparks)
What Topping Can Do To You
Do you know a golfer who has never ‘topped’ a ball? Do you know anyone who didn’t completely miss the ball occasionally the first few times they had a go? I have seen a few but they are certainly a rare breed. I know I missed the odd ball and topped my fair share of shots when I started to play.
Most people are particularly sensitive to what they do and to what happens to them when they commence a new activity. In golf, our first attempts are often less than fantastic. Debilitating negative self-images start invading our minds at this early and vulnerable stage.
Making a fool of yourself in front of your friends and colleagues is not likely to fill you with enthusiasm for the game! In fact, at that time, it bears no resemblance to a ‘game’ at all and can be quite demoralising. I wonder how many prospective golfers ever make it past this initial meeting with the intricacies of hitting a little innocent and inoffensive ball. Now, I might be exaggerating but my comments are based on some factual experience. Just last week I coached two different ladies on the same afternoon who will both play much better golf when they accept that they are normally gifted at it and not as useless as they think. They are in their sixties and play off twenty-seven and thirty-five handicaps. Both used the following term to describe how they feel on the course when hitting a bad shot, “I feel so stupid.” Yet they are very intelligent, successful women who swing the club quite well but suffer from a lack of confidence. They are far from being stupid.
Knowing their negative self-images, can you imagine how they react to playing in front of other golfers? Are they likely to move freely with an air of authority or are they more likely to look a little shy and make inhibited and nervous movements? The answer is that they will find great improvement in their shots when they have the confidence to move MORE. With the aid of ‘La Danse du Golf’ both ladies are making good progress and are already displaying more of the six basic elements. What they both need is the confidence to make those better swings when they play on the course with other players. They both now understand the effects of Timothy Gallwey’s Self One and Self Two inner conversations and are gradually learning to trust their Self Two’s. They are also filling their positive boxes and letting go of the negative ones just as Michelle did so successfully.
The first hurdle to get over when you start to play this game is to know that your ball will consistently get off the ground. When you stand over every shot with the feeling that you are likely to hit it well and get it up in the air your confidence will grow. Whilst it is likely that beginners will top the ball quite regularly, there is no reason why this shouldn’t disappear after a while. Now, this may be a few weeks or a few months and it is important to know that even pros can top the odd one.
What Really Causes Topping
Let’s have a closer look at how a golf ball is topped. The word ‘topped’ is significant because it means that the club has contacted the top of the ball. If the club doesn’t contact the ball under its centre-line or equator it won’t fly up in the air. There are 4 major causes of this problem:
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Tension in hands and arms. Try the following experiment. Hold a 7-iron at your side with the head of the club touching the ground beside your feet. You should hold it very lightly and your arm should hang loosely with your shoulder low and relaxed. Now, see what happens when your hand tightens on the grip and your arm and shoulder stiffen with this effort. The club comes off the ground! Have you lifted your head? No.
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Your head comes up but not because it moved in an effort to look up early. Why would you do that? After all, the main focus is on hitting the ball so why would you be looking anywhere else? No, the whole body has been forced up because its natural path through the shot has been blocked by the intention to keep your head down. Your golfing partners see your head coming up because the head in golf obsesses us all. What they don’t see is the whole body moving up, the weight not moving forward and your legs straightening. Top golfers keep their centre of gravity at a constant height until well after impact. Top golfers don’t try to keep their heads down. In all the years I’ve played tournament golf I’ve never heard a fellow pro tell another player that he lifted his head! Tony Jacklin was interviewed on Radio 5 Live shortly after his book was published in 2008. He was asked what was the worst tip he’d ever been given. He didn’t hesitate in answering, “Keep my head down!”
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The distance between your body’s centre and the club head is too short to pick up the bottom of the ball because you have un-cocked your wrists too late as you approach impact. You will remember the troubles I suffered by working hard on the ‘late hit.’ Well, I even got to the stage where my 3-wood tee shots were often topped and could shoot off at right angles. Most embarrassing for a young tournament player!
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Many topped shots are actually just shots that don’t get up in the air and come off the shank or hosel. Please read the section regarding the cure for this, the 2BX. It is essential for golfers to understand what has happened. Most of them are so concerned with ‘why did it happen’ that they fail to analyse poor shots correctly.
Please bear in mind that you don’t have to hit down to get the ball flying. All you need is the club to be low enough to get under the line on the ball, i.e. the equator of the ball, and that it is moving forward at some speed. Personally, I rarely ask players to hit down as this concept produces the wrong type of movement that will compromise your ability to turn freely through the shot and finish the movement correctly. I will talk to you later in this chapter about the importance of finishing the golf swing well.
In over 30 years of studying videos and watching average golfers I have rarely seen anyone topping the ball because they looked up too early. The only players I’ve seen do this are several pros and low handicap amateurs and it doesn’t stop them hitting great shots consistently.
Tension is generally at the core of most ills in golf and nowhere is this more damaging than when it gets into your muscles and joints. When we concentrate too much, or concentrate in the wrong way, tension often creeps into the shoulders. I’m sure you’ve experienced this when driving your car or concentrating on the computer screen and have to lower and relax them from time to time. In golf, tension stiffens and shortens our muscles and leads to topping, shanking, i.e. hitting the ball off the heel of an iron, and general excesses in the effort required to hit the ball.
As a fault it is one of the most devious, as it doesn’t always show itself to the spectator. Two swings may look identical, even under the magnifying glass of slow motion and still frame video images, but hidden tension can make one of them top the ball whilst the other can produce a great shot
To be poor at Golf you need to do things poorly
Friday, 1 January 2016
What it's like to play golf when your blind Guest Blog by Barrie Ritchie
TRY A FEW HOLES BLINDFOLDED
I have been coached by Julian for around9 or 10 months and he has asked me to write about what is like to play golf when you are blind, so here is a little insight into my golfing world.
The truth is I don’t really see that many differences between being a sighted golfer and playing as a blind golfer, except for the obvious. In fact, I think that in some instances it may be an advantage not to be able to see. Hopefully, I can explain as we go along. I imagine the first question most of you would ask is What is it like playing when you are blind? My response to that would be what do you think it would be like?
I have been playing since 1990. At that time I had some sight although not enough to follow a ball in flight or to see the flag from around 100 yards. Around 10/12 years ago my handicap was 17. I have a condition that caused my sight to fail almost totally. Now, I do still have a very small amount of light perception depending on the brightness of the daylight.
As I mentioned earlier I do not feel that there are too many differences when I play as when you play. For instance, when I play a course that I have played a number of times I have a particular image in my mind of each hole because it has been described to me by my guide/caddy. In that way I am as familiar with the course as you are except we have different images as yours will obviously be visual and mind will be a mental image which will have been based on information given to me by my guide/caddy and how many times I have played the course. One of the things that you develop as a blind person is the ability to remember information that is important to you and golf is a big part of my life. I have played golf now for so long as a blind golfer I don’t even think about being blind when I play. That may sound strange to you but like a lot of things in golf it is second nature now. Personally I don’t think about things like posture and alignment too much because I have learned that to get them right I have a couple of things I have to do once I have addressed the ball to get it right. For instance, I have a tendency to address the ball with a closed stance so I always make sure to withdraw my left foot slightly and I also tend to have a slightly closed club face at address, to correct that I now to just open the face by moving my grip to the right, to do that I use the logo on my grips. I always have Golf Pride grips put on my clubs as I have found that they have a moredetectable logo when I run my finger along the grip. I also know the feel I get from impact of the ball whether or not it has gone right or left, I can probably tell 7 out of 10. One of the big differences between myself and a sighted golfer is that I don’t have the necessity to lift my head to look when I swing or putt. Generally I know how far I hit a given club with a good swing, therefore I always mentally allow myself margin of error, therefore I always hit one more club than I would for the yardage , depending on the conditions. It also allows me to swing within myself which means I keep my balance under control.
I also have the advantage of not being able to see how tight the course may be or how many hazards are on a hole which means I don’t get spooked by them. When I’m told that there is a hazard I never try to play shots I can’t, which means I always play within my capability and if that means laying up and taking an extra shot so be it because I believe I can make it up on the remaining holes. Around the greens there will always be an advantage being a sighted golfer but I have a method that I use around the greens that may benefit some golfers, because I can’t see the flag or the contours of the green or the gradients I will pace to the landing area /fringewhen I’m chipping onto a green.I f I’m on the putting surface I always pace my putts with my guide/caddy. By doing that I also use the feeling from my feet to get a feel of the green texture, some of you may think that is a little bit far fetched,but believe me I have developed the feeling over the years enough to give myself an idea of whether or not the green is close cut or a little bit woolly. Try it. Sometimes I can also tell if there is a slope and which way it will go in relation to the putt. No doubt some of you will be thinking that this would slow down the speed of play, but, I do this while my playing partners are playing. I have spent a lot of time over the years practising my putting by feel alone, my routine is always 5 paces, 10 paces and 15 paces, then I will finish with some from around 2 feet. When chipping onto a green I try to relate it to my putting practise and use my putting grip and stroke as much as I can. Perhaps you should give it a try.EYES CLOSED OF COURSE! I have learned that as a blind golfer there are times when I cannot play from some lies in things like very deep rough, so rather than gamble with shots I will always try and find an option and take a penalty drop even if it means going back on line fifty or sixty yards, better that than taking four or five shots to move the ball 20yards. I have played a lot of sighted golfers that take on these sort of shots and end up ruining their card. Trust me it is not worth it. My average gross scores are around117/ 120 on a par 72 which doesn’t sound great but, I have learned to accept that is where my golf is. I personally believe that I can bring my average down to around 110 which is my target for 2016. That belief comes from a recent round at Tewkesbury Golf& Country Club where I shot a gross 111par 73 .
"Barrie is an inspiration, his enthusiasm for the game is amazing and i thankful that I get to join him on his golfing journey