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Played The Oaks at Tan-Tara yesterday. It's an ok course.
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Okay, I went back to the golf grip and continued my quest to hit down on the ball. The results were better. I hit my irons very well. This grip trends to force the club face on the driver open at contact, so I sliced several drives. The result was an 86 including four triple bogeys. Three were on the front nine. I played really well on the back nine finishing 13/18 with: par, birdie, par, par, grrr triple. Had I not blown 18 all to hell I would have finished the back in 39. Never been under 40 on nine. Ever.
So, I'm encourage, but could use some advice on how to cure the slice off the tee. Also, my 8th grade son is ready to play again. I can find cheap clubs but need to get him fitted. Any suggestions in or around the KC area would be great. |
Bubba shot the juke box and he leads the Masters.
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I had a couple of terrible shanks today
Hit a roof ROFL Early in the season still lol |
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Regarding your slice: Make sure that you are finishing your swing with almost all of your weight on your front foot. If you still notice that the balls are leaking, try to ingrain a feeling of shaking hands with your dominant hand past impact. Those should stop you from hanging back and leaving the face open. |
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Should go without saying, but if you get the chance to go to Augusta National - even for a Monday practice round - do it.
Wednesday was just an incredible experience. Walked the course in the AM and had a front row seat on the ropes of #1 tee for the Par 3 Contest. http://i61.tinypic.com/289gbxk.jpg |
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It's really worth it to go. I was shocked at how hilly it is, tv doesn't do it justice. If you lay up on 15, it's like hitting of a mountain. Also, did you notice once you get inside, things are extremely cheap (food, beverages etc)? |
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Also, 12 looks nothing like it looks on TV. If anything, it's a bit uphill. Green complexes are amazing. 7 is just diabolical. And yeah, prices are very friendly. I think the most expensive thing on the menu was an import beer at $4. And the places where Phil hit that 4-iron from the pine straw on 13 and Bubba with the monster hook on 10 were incredible to see. Amazing shots. |
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It's a massive sideslope |
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Play the slope bro! |
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So I've changed my posture a bit this year. I've moved back a little off my toes towards my heels an tried to get a little more knee flex. It's really helped me get it on plane coming down a lot easier as I don't take it back outside ad fight to get it back inside like I was recently.
With my old posture, stance etc, I would tend to get stuck on the way down as my body was in the way and I really had to spin out of it to get out of the way and it was hell on my lower back. So far this year, big improvement. |
Also to any of you guys who hit a lot of balls practice a lot etc, invest in some tour sticks (or use clubs) for alignment.
When practicing, take that element out of the equation so you can wok on other things. |
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Wow. Woodland was seven under through 10, then bogeyed 11 and doubled 12.
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I got mine for 50 cents, but mainly I like them cause their bright colored and easy to see. Plus you can stick them in the ground |
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Assuming you are: in your follow through you should have the feeling of almost all your weight being on your lead foot (your right), and you should feel as though your left arm (your dominant side) is reaching forward to shake hands with someone just out of your grasp. If you prefer a tennis analogy, assume you are trying to hit a topspin forehand. Your weight must be forward and your dominant hand must overtake your weak hand Look at the seventh panel in this swing sequence: http://www.golfdigest.com/images/gol...r13_swings.jpg Now, consider the difference with this: http://www.rotaryswing.com/golf-less...cken-wing2.jpg Notice how open the face is here. In order to hit the ball straight this guy has to flip his hands at impact and hope for perfect timing. One way you can work on this is the Gary Player drill. Hit balls with a 7-iron and on your follow through take a step towards the target. Eventually you'll feel what it's like to finish with your weight in front and shake hands with the target. |
Freddie Couples is only four back. Given the resume of the guys in front of him, if he can shoot 68 tomorrow, he might win the damn thing.
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Spieth has been amazing on and around the greens in his first Masters.
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As odd as it sounds, if Augusta is unusually firm it lessens the disadvantage faced by n00bs. |
Hamas, thanks for the visual. That really helped me understand. I enjoy working on this stuff on the range. Can't wait to try it tomorrow morning.
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Bubba has gotten all flippy with the putter.
He's got great hands, but he also uses small muscles to manipulate the club face. Gets tough under pressure. |
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When you look at the guys with the most longevity (playing great in their 40s) for te most part, they don't have a lot of moving parts in their swing. |
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Where Bubba will get in trouble is his putting. He's among the best on the tour in longer putting because that is a much more feel-driven stroke, but he's one of the worst players from 5-15 feet because he doesn't have enough time to square the face. He's also a pretty mediocre iron player if you look at his GIR %s based on distance. He's definitely unique. He probably has one of the five best sets of hands ever, so maybe he can stave that decline off longer than most. |
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I don't think upright vs flat will bother longevity as much as other things. Usually the upright guys are better iron players and can struggle with driver, but he's unique in that regard. I'm taller so I'm more partial to upright swings tho so there is that |
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There is a lot of variance and luck involved in majors. Someone like Greg Norman got legit hosed out of 3-4 majors, while Ernie Els was outright handed two of his four majors. They aren't a perfect metric for measuring a golfer's ability, but they're still the best one available. If you are discerning in your evaluation, it's easy to see why someone like Sergio Garcia or Lee Westwood is a far better golfer than Shaun Micheel or Todd Hamilton even though they haven't won majors. A fair analysis requires a number of data points. Rich Beem plays out of his mind for a week and wins a major. Fred Couples battles through years of injury, wins a major, and several other tour titles. Angel Cabrera shows up once every other year and competes in the US Open or at Augusta and ends up winning two Westwood grinds around Europe for years, wins a ton of tournaments, contends in a lot of majors, yet routinely shits his pants. If I'm ranking them as golfers I go: Couples Westwood Cabrera Beem |
You do rely on yourself, but like you said, that's not the only factor in winning vs losing.
Same as matchups in football, course selection or the course being played plays a factor and some guys (like beem or the Asian that beat tiger at the PGA who's name eludes me) can get hot and win. My assumption basically stops there. I don't think winning a major, by itself as a measuring point, is a good way to go. |
After Scott, Watson is probably the second best golfer in the world right now. The top is as weak as I've ever seen it, maybe 1995 or so right before Tiger arrived. This leader board is really weak. If McIlroy doesn't revert to his prior form then you'll be seeing some serious no names (Shaun Micheel style) eke these future majors out.
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Three of the players tied or within a shot of the lead are in the top 13 in the world, so I don't quite get the weak leaderboard talk (Spieth is also going to end up being a consistent top 5 player in his career in all likelihood). I've certainly seen worse.
There's just a changing of the guard going in at the top of golf right now. The guys from the Tiger era are declining (even though he himself remains #1 for now) while younger guys are overtaking them (Scott, Day, McIlroy, D. Johnson, Spieth, etc.). |
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Rickie Fowler, masters champion
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That's what people are bemoaning. |
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In 1963, Jack Nicklaus became the youngest Masters winner.
17 years later, Seve broke the record. 17 years after that, Tiger broke the record. 17 years after Tiger? http://cdn.dejanseo.com.au/wp-conten...12/11/whoa.jpg |
jordan speith...get used to his name. In the past year he's been paired up with some great golfers...he beat woods by 9, rory by 11, and beat Scott by 6 strokes. He appears to be some kind of undertaker.
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I have to root for the old Spaniard. It would be frickin' epic for a 50 year old, pony-tailed, wine drinking cigar smoker that never practices, restores one-off Ferraris, and has the most interesting warm-up in sports to win the Masters.
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I'd love for Freddie to make a run, I'd be cool with MAJ, Rickie, Furyk, Westwood, Spieth or even Kucher. Should be a fun day. |
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Have no idea why you'd root for Furyk. Dude is older than dirt and nobody outside of the golf world even knows who he is. He won a major anyway. |
I'd like to see Spieth win this.
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I have no desire to see Kuchar, Watson, or Furyk win. Bubba is a ****ing bitch, and I hate Kuchar's swing. Furyk winning is a pretty long shot because he's a professional choke artist and he usually plays like a guy who would rather finish top five than take the chances to win.
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I like Kuchar a lot, but I don't think he's got the mental game to win.
Fowler for me |
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I'm in the process of buying a practice down there and moving back here in a few months. Thinking about joining out at Highland (it's pretty cheap compared to Hickory which is closer to our house but I'm not payin that much) you'll have to come join me for a round. Perhaps you become a pt or something and we can call it a business expense :) |
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Now, let's go Spieth. I wanna see the kid from Dallas win it all today. |
Watsons game is fun to watch. Casual golf fans are intrigued by him because e crushes the driver. People want to see sports where guys do things we cannot. Nobody is intrigued watching Kuchar or Furyk or Zach Johnson navigate a course by hitting spots and laying up.
So many of the greats brought personality. That's what the sport needs now. Not Jonas Blixt (although its cool to know I saw him play Lionsgate a couple years ago) |
I guess for the casual fan that doesn't really follow golf that's true.
I love watching guys plot their way around a course. There's an art to it |
Freddy just had a nice bird to go -3
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fowler now done
****ing putter. I thought he was gonna tie for the lead :facepalm: lot of tourney left but that ****ing hurt |
Spieth lips one in for the lead on the 2nd hole. Now we'll really see what he's made of.
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Kuchar off to a good start
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Couples had a nice par save from distance... keeps him in the game.
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All the guys at 3 under are absolutely still in it though. Just get to the back within 4 and it's anyone's game
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SPIETH!
HOLED OUT FROM THE BUNKER |
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Let's see what happens at amen corner though. |
They're birdieing some really hard holes.
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Spieth delivers again. Nice putt. Now up 2 on Watson and 4 on Kuchar.
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hopefully he is too young to realize it's the masters
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Incredible start for Spieth. -3 on the toughest stretch on the course.
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Not sure about hitting 3 wood there
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Golf Win Probs @kenpomgolf 1m
Masters win chances (R4 4:11pm): Spieth(7) 65%, Watson 24%, Kuchar 6%, Fowler 2%, Blixt 2%, Others 1% KenPom for golf. It's a 2 man race. |
First sign the kid might crack.
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Did he bogey 8?
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And now he hit a bad approach shot. |
Wow, it can just change that fast around here. Bubba is hitting some big time shots/putts.
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