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GOLF
TEACHING PRO MAGAZINE®
SWING
CHANGES
Required Commitment
By John Savage
USGTF Level IV Member and Examiner - Langhorne, Pennsylvania
Maybe I’m a little
old fashioned, but I find “crash courses” a little mind-boggling. We
are a society which demands pills to fix just about everything, and
now we are into crash courses that attempt to teach us a great deal
in a minimal amount of time. There are crash courses on how to start
an exercise program, how to lose weight quickly, how to use your
newly purchased computer in two easy lessons, and the list goes on.
Have we become a lazy society? Do we think everything can be solved
quickly? Has instant breakfast and online banking had that much
effect on us? People today don’t want it now – they want it
yesterday.
Where do some of your
students fit into this? Are they people who are proactive or
reactive? Do they wait for someone to fix it for them (“Gee, I
always hit it good when you’re standing there with me on the lesson
tee, but when I’m on my own, I just don’t do as well”), or will they
actually do something to fix the problem? Did they have a crash
course mentality when they came to you for a lesson? Do they want to
play better by next Tuesday, or are they committed to working on
improving?
It is a fallacy to
think that one can become thin and keep the weight off after a crash
diet, or become fit, learn how to fix a car, or become a gourmet
cook in two weeks or less. In golf, is there such a thing as a quick
fix for a beginner? Let’s face it – it’s never just one thing with a
high handicapper’s golf swing. Effective transformation is going to
require a commitment , which in turn requires time.
A golf student has to
want to make a change. Then they must understand the amount of time
that is needed to make a difference. They have to be realistic about
their athletic ability and how much effort is necessary to achieve
improvement. Real change means working on it diligently for more
than a week or two. It takes time to learn which exercises work best
for each individual. It takes time to get results from a new diet.
It takes time for a golfer to become comfortable with a swing
adjustment. Players need to be patient if they are looking for the
improvement to be permanent.
We recently made a
backswing change in a 2-handicap golfer. The change moved his
position at the top of his swing to the inside about four inches,
and the left palm position from parallel to pointing slightly down.
He hit 100 balls a day for five months before he was comfortable
with the fact that he would not regress to his old swing during
competition with his improved ballstriking.
Obviously, not many
players have that type of dedication. Getting them to understand how
to practice properly, and link their perspiration to their
inspiration, might help them get past their counting on a quick fix.
Crash course
expectations give false hope to many. To others, they can be the
beginner’s course to real improvement if a person’s thoughts are
used to prime the engines of change. Then, they are beneficial.
However, if they are used instead as a quick fix, they can actually
be harmful. They can become an excuse to quit. For students to
improve, they must understand what they need to change (and you and
they must understand what not to change) to accomplish it. As
teachers, we can only make it clear, and by making it clear we can
make it easier for the student to comprehend. The motivation must
come from within the person who wants to make progress. Then, they
must work on it.
A student should
understand that it is not the speed in getting there, it’s the
arriving. Remind them to slow down. There will be good days, bad
days, and regressive days. All players have what is called “game
slippage.” This means, no matter how well they do on the lesson tee
and afterwards on the practice range, they will not perform as well
during a round of golf until they have mastered what you have
corrected in the swing.
A student must be
willing to continue the effort so that the change you make today
won’t disappear by next week. If not, then the crash course
mentality will continue to cause failure. Make sure they understand
that by staying with the program the improvement they are seeking is
much more possible.
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